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OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT.
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
VOL. V.

280

NEW YORK, N.Y., FRIDAY, JUNE II, 1943

No. 12

Agents Conference Tightens War
Operations Of Atlantic And Gulf
BUSY AGENTS ARE PHOTOGRAPHED AT CONFERENCE

Forges Close International
Labor Ties For Post War
Struggle With Shipowners
The conference held last week by. the Agent'the
Atlantic and Gulf District of the SIU, resulted in many
important constitutional and organizational revisions aimed
at the tightening of the union apparatus for the critical
war and post war periods.

Meeting at Hotel Sc. George in^
New York, May 26 to June 1, the come. All resolutions and motions
(Standing) Charles Waid, Savannah; Harry Collins, Philadelphia; Matthew Dughane, Internatienal Rep'
SIU Agents drew up proposed re­ passed by the Conference will now
resentativa; Olden Banks, Mobile; Joe Plannagan, Baltimore; John Mogan, Boston; D. L. Parker, Tampa;
visions to the Constitution, enact­ be submitted to the membership
and A. W. Armstrong, New Orleans.
ed emergency clauses for the ship­ for ratification.
(Seated) J. K. Shaugnassey, Port Everglades; Matthew Biggs, International Representative; Frank Wil­
Highlight of the Cionference was
ping rules and passed ten resolu­
liams, New York; Harry Lundeberg, International President; John Hawk, Secretary-Treasurer; E, R.
the
appearance of Omar Becu, Am­
tions to serve as guides for the
Wallace, Galveston and Martin Trainor, Norfolk.
erican Representative of the Inter­
union's operation in the months to
national Transport Workers Feder­
ation. Also present were repre­
The Seafarers Log
sentatives of the Danish, Nor­
Seditious?
wegian," Swidish, English, Yu­
goslavian,
Belgian and Dutch sea­
Brother
Armstrong reported
men's
unions.
These brothers were
to the Agents' Conference that
seted
on
the
Conference
as frater­
several issues of the SEAFAR­
nal delegates and joined in a lively
ERS LOG were seized by Cus­
/ . The lasV is»ae-oF-the
Twelfth Naval-District-shortly afr paragraph 2 of the Statement of toms Agents in New Orleans and instructive discussion on the
Log announced that a Security ter Pearl Harbor, affecting vessels Policy dated May 4, 1942.
international problems facing the
when union delegates attempted
Watch Agreement had been nego­ on the Pacific Coast, as a result of
seamen's
unions of all countries.
The standing of these port se­ to take the paper aboard the
tiated with the Mississippi, Water­ which the Pacific American " Ship­ curity watches in compliance with S. S. George Washington.
The result was a tightening of the
man and South Atlantic j^ines. owners Association, representing the Ck&gt;ast Guard Regulations is an
fraternal bonds uniting SlU men
The SEAFARERS LOG is an
'Since then, however, the union has the Pacific Coast offshore opera­ emergency measure brought about official union paper, distributed with their foreign brothers and the
been sabotaged by the War Ship­ tors, and the unions affected en­ by reason of the existence of the on the S. S. George Washington laying of ground work for post
ping Administration, which in­ tered into supplementary agree­ war; .and it is therefore a subject to union men. Is such a publi­ war action, on an international
structed the sliipowners not to ments on the subject of port se­ upon which the War Shipping Ad­ cation and such a distribution scale, against the shipowners.
sign the agpeement. The Log pub­ curity watches. These supplemen­ ministration feels uniformity of
(Tlie text of Omar Becu's open­
seditious in the eyes of the In­
lish^ the Agreement because it tary agreements have b^n ap­ treatment is desirable. Many of ternal Revenue Department? If ing remarks to the conference is
had been negotiated in good faith proved both by the War Shipping the clauses in the three proposed 80, these bureaucrats go even printed on page 3 of this issue of
by both the union and the ship­ Administration and also by the supplementary agreements arc further than Smith and Dies the Log.)
owners through the regular collec­ National War Labor Board; and modeled on those found in the Pa­ and Cox who yell for labor's
The resolutions passed by the
tive bargaining apparatus, and we our advice is that they have work­ cific Coast agreements; some blood in the halls of Congress.
Conference pertained to: 1, A de­
' assumed- that it would become ed out in practice to the satisfac­ clauses merely clarify provisions
mand that the Coast Guard cease
This action is being protested
tion of all parties concerned.
binding on all parties.
found in the Pacific Coast agree­ to the Internal Revenue Depart­ delegating its authority on sea­
But we reckoned without the
The three supplementary agree­ ments; but there arc some provis­ ment and the War Shipping Ad­ men's papers to the RMO; 2. The
swivel chair artists in W.ashington. ments were negotiated between ions which go beyond the Pacific
granting to the Port Agents the
ministration. The issue is an
Mr. Hubert Wyckoff apparently ybur union and the three compan­ Cioast agreements and require the
authority to set hall to ship time
important one for what is in­
disapproves the SIU agreement be­ ies above named subject to ap­ standing of watches in situations
for dispatched men; 3. A demand
volved is the freedom of the en­
cause it goes further than the SUP proval by the War Shipping Ad­ not required by the Coast Guard
that the MWEB restore port and
tire labor press.
agreement and he is worried that ministration in accordance with
area bonuses and that it confine it­
{Continued on Page 3)
it might cut into the shipowners',
self to the settlement of disputes
profits a bit.
"&gt; •
between shipowners and union; 4.
Here is the letter sent by WyckA call for the organization of all
off to the union and to the oper­
unlicensed men riding SIU con­
tracted ships; 5. A demand that
ators:
Spotlight loving Edward 'Macayley, Deputy George Hotel in Brooklyn, New York, have gone
the
WSA approve the Security
Mr. John Hawk
Administrator of the War Sliipping Administra­ on record requesting you or Mr. Hubert Wyckoff
Watch
Agreement reached between
Secretary-Treasurer
tion, is usually right-on deck at the NMU hoop- to address this gathering, or that you designate a
the
Union
and the Mississippi,
Seafarers International Union
de-doops because he know there will be plenty of duly authorized representative of the War Slip­
Waterman
and
South Atlantic
Of North America
photographers present. Check through back is­ ping Administration to address this conference
Waterman
and
South
Atlantic lines;
2 Stone Street
sues of The Pilot and you'll see plenty of photo­ on the over all operations of the War Shipping
7.
Tightening
of
rules
covering the
New York, New York
graphs of the Captain smiling benignly on Ham Administration. Please wire reply.
transfering
from
one
department
Dear Mr. Hawk;
Head and his sweater boys. But when it comes {From Macauley to Hawk, May 27)
to another; 8. Clarification of va­
This letter is In reference to
to a real working conference of SIU Agents
cation clauses hr contracts; 9. AgRefering your telegram 26th requesting repre­
Supplements to collective bargain­
(without photogmphers and publicity), then the sentative War Slipping Administration address
gitation for a boost in Bosun pay
ing agreements between your
Captain is too busy to attend.
to $150 per month; and 10. Pre­
conference now in session, regret no suitable rep­
Union and Waterman Steamship
The SIU Agents Cionference was called for the resentative available this week. How long will
paration for the winning of the
Agency, Ltd. South - Atlantic
specific purpose of increasing the efficiency of conference last?
four watch system after the war as
Steamship Line, and Mississippi
crewing operations on the Atlantic and Gulf
a means of keeping Union men
Shipping Company, Inc. The sup­
coasts—a subject presumably of interest to the {From Hawk to Macauley, Mtfv 28)
employed during the anticipated
plementary agreements deal with
This Is to advise you that the Seafarers Inter­
Captain. But despite the sending of two invita­
depression.
the subject of port security
national
Union Agents Conference will be in ses­
tions, Macauley refused to leave Washington.
The full text of all resolutions
watches required by Regulations
The following exchange of telegrams tells the sion all day Sunday, May 30 and Monday, May 51.
are printed in this issue of the Log.
for the Security of Vessels in Port,
Please reply as to whether you can have a repre­
All members should study them
story:
issued and approved December 31,
sentative
here.
carefully so that they can partici-.
{From
Hawk
to
Macauley,
May
26)
1942, )particularly Sections 6.305
pate in the discussion and cast in­
The Agents of the Atlantic and Gulf District {From Macauley to Hawk, May 29)
arid 6.322 of those Regulations.v
Regret
impracticable
to
send
representative
for
telligent
ballots at the Brmch
of the Seafarers International Union of North
: A somewhat similar order wa.s
conference.
Appreciate
the
invitation.
meetings.
America, in duly assembled conference at the St.
issued by the Commandant of the

WSA SABOTAGES SEAFARERS'
SECURITY WATCH CONTRACT

Macauley Gives SIU The Brush-Off

• ''MP,

V:.:

I

�Page Twd

THE SE A

ILEA'S' LOG

4-

rR€P01?T OI\
^ASHirXGTOtV'I

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

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

HARRY LUNDEBERG

------

Since my arrival back in Wash­
ington after attending the SIU
Agents Conference in New York,
I have been working with the SIU
committee that was elected to con­
tact governrheht agencies here and
submit some of the problems
which are confronting the union.
Contact the Coast Guard regarding
the RMO having the power to
clear all requests for applicants for
seamens certificates, and from all
indications there will be a change
in this policy.
The WSA has informed the
commit.ee that they will not ap­
prove of the Port &amp;curity Watch
Agreemelit tha^was negotiated by
the SIU and the operators.

President

110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Secy-Treas.

2 Stone Street, New York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE

-

-

Directory of Branches

I

BOSTON
BALTIMORE
PHILADELPHIA
NORFOLK
NEW ORLEANS
SAVANNAH
TAMPA
MOBILE
PUERTO RICO
GALVESTON
FT. LAUDERDALE

ADDRESS
PHONE
2 Stone St
Dispatcher's 0£Bce...
. BOwliing Green 9-3430
Agent
.BOwIing Green 9-3437
330 Atlantic Ave
.Liberty 4057
14 North Gay St
d;i:ve; .
6 North 6th St.
Lombard ?651
25 Commercial PI
...Norfolk 4-1083
...309 Chartres St
Canal 3336
218 East Bay St.
Savannah 3-1728
423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
55 So. Conception St
Dial Z-1392
45 Ponce de Leon.
Puerto de TIeiTa
219 20lh Street
Galveston 2-8043
2021 S. Federal Highway..

Out af the Foesl

Honorable Franklin D. Roosevelt
President, United States of America
White House
Washington, D. C.
Dear Sir:
The Agents of the Atlantic and Gulf District of the Seafarers In­
ternational Union of North America, assembled in conference at the St.
George Hotel, Brooklyn, New York on June 1, 1943, instructed me
to bririg to your attention a situation which is harming the
effort
and hindering this Union in fulfilling its obligation to supply crews to
vessels which it has under contract.

Merchant Seamen's Club In Glasgow
Thanks to the contributions of
the members of the American
Federation of Labor, merchant
seamen of all Allied nations spend­
ing their shore leaves in Glasgow,
Scotland, can now obtain rest, re­
creation, food, and when necessary
warm clothing, at the newly open­
ed Havelock Wilson Glasgow Mer­
chant Seamen's Club. The club
has been established and will be
maintained with funds donated by
AFL members through the Labor
League for Human Rights.
American Ambassador John G.
Winant, at the opening ceremonies,
read a cable from Matthew Woll,
president of the Labor League for
Human Rights, in which Mr. Woll
declared:
"It does us'no special honor to
iiave been able to assist the mer­

S.S. Fitz John Porter:

by Sam Shatkovnick

DR Asked To Correct
Muddle On Seaman Papers

Before the Coast Guard delegated authority of approving all ap­
plicants for seamen's papers to the Recruitment and^ Manning Organi­
zation of the War Shipping Administration, this Union dealt directly
with the local U. S. Steamboat Inspectors and the U. S. Shipping Com­
missioners and experienced little or no difficulty in obtaining seamen's
papers for the men who wanted to go to sea.
This meant a more rapid crewing of ships needed to transport war
supplies. In the interest of al! out war effort, this procedure should
be revived.
Very truly yours,
JOHN HAWK

Maritime War
Emergency Board:

Board is yerifying the above claind
and as soon as the company noti­
fies them as to the entries made iij"
the different ships* log hooks, of
can he verified by the proper milftary authorities, bonuses will
payable.
i
Board has ruled that part of thd
crew is entitled to bonuses until
they arrived in the U. S. This case
is not completely settled as the
union contended that all of the
crew are entitled to bonus. Board
is investigating the claims.

Aims Of WSA-RMO

PUBLICATION OFFICE:
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8346

I am enclosing a resolution that was adopted at the Agents Con­
ference and is self-explanatory.

A meeting was held this after­
noon between the committee and
the WSA regarding the crews
quarters on the Liberty ships.

There are several disputes re­
garding attack bonus and the fol­
lowing ships are involved: Jefferson
Meyers and Vermont in Murmansk,
Raphel Semmes in .j\vonmouth
England and left the dock and was
in channel when Bristol Channel
was attacked. Francis Marion was
anchored at Hull when an attack
occured there. Carles Brantley
Some
the.^5mb:'(S^f the
Aycock was at I^wport Wales crew Were given shore leave by the
when an attack occured there. The master and were notified that the
vessel would leave the dock at 12
noon and to be aboard at 11. Crew!
were ashore and the vessel left at
A.M. Crew was prevented from;
going aboard the vessel due to the
port regulations which prohibit
any hum boat to take members o;£
any crew on hoard a vessel that-is
lying in the stream waiting tfli
On May 20 the newspaper columnist Drew Pearson make up a convoy. If this ordef
wrote in his Column "Washington Merry-go-round" that had not been in effect, crew would
the WSA is staying up nights, "conspiring to drive the have made the vessel. Union con­
tends crew is entitled to ,wage8i
maritime unions from the sea" by training a surplus of bonus and loss of personal effects.
apprentice seamen for which no jobs are available. This is More on this next week.
a fact which the SIU has been
pointing out for months, hut this
is the first time that a national
columnist has broken the story.

- Washington Rep.

424 .5th Street, N. W., Washington, D, C.
wi
»
m

BRANCH
NEW YORK

3?iid^, -Jurie 11,

With union seamen risking their
lives on ill-planned, slow WSA
freighters, the WSA procedes to
train "tractable" (servant-like)
apprentice seamen for the purpose
of smashing the unions. Why such
an attitude on the part of the ship­
owners and the WSA? The Union
seamen sail the ships, run the risk
deliver the cargo. What more can
they ask of the seamen. The only
thing they ask is that we give up
our union and go hack to the old
days of the U. S. Shipping Board
and the fink halls.
But in their dealings with the
shipowners and builders, the WSA
asks nothing. On the contrary,
public money is flowing into mil­
lions of dollars in cool profits. And
when these unholy twins are
caught red handed in scandalous
profiteering, and in building defec­
tive ships, the WSA, press, radio,
hushes the affair up and merely
reprimands them for being
naughty boys. Then we hear that'
the WSA rewards them by giving
them more millions In contracts for
their "E" production.
From its inception, the Mari­
time Commission's real purpose has
been to smash the unions. We sea­
men haven't any confidence in this
biased government organization
In order not to have our union
destroyed, as has been done in to­
talitarian countries, we must hind
ourselves together and fight for our
right to have a collective, demo­
cratic union. We must fight
to
destroy the shipowner-RMO-fink
card system which has been en­
dorsed by the Stalinist top fraction
in the NMU.

chant seamen who hear the brunt
of our fight. It is in the spirit of
fellowship that we have sent our
contribution; we hope you will ac­
cept it in that spirit."
Ambassador Winant then spoke
in terms of high praise for Ameri­
can workers, not only in acknowl­
edging their contributions for the
Glasgow Merchant Seamen's Club,
hut also for the support rendered
in many other ways to projects de­
signed to relieve the suffering of
their British comrades.
The club, which was named for
Havelock Wilson, founder of the
The only registration card we
British Seamen's Union, will offer
facilities long needed by seamen will accept is a union card!
ashqre'from their hard and danger­
ous duties with the Atlantic con­
voys.

Remember — Don*t Sign
WSA-RMO Fink Cards

by

3-- a.
The record held by Jules Souza of being in a lifeboat for 34 dajni
was finally broken by six other SIU men headed by Marvin Swint wlwi •
were in a lifeboat for 44 days. We believe that the brothers are shooc- '
ing for that record of 83 days at sea in an open lifeboat. Wouldn't'bi^ .
surprised if some SIU man passed it.
AAA
All the brothers were shocked to hear of the sudden death of BoB
Hageman who passed away in his sleep. The organization regrets
loss of such an able Union brother. George Piasecki had to he oper­
ated on after his ordeal in a lifeboat for 22 days. We received a letter
from Africa wherein Carroll Quinnt informed us about his marriage)
and his intention to join the Army. We wish him luck. John Carr^
who recently bought $1700 worth of bonds came around Hearquarter»
asking for a stake offering the" bonds as collateral. Al Cramer finilly
got that Iceland money changed into American money yith the help
of Jack Hawk. Ail the bar iflies have got their hands out. -Donald E.
Kraft was called into the Navy. We hope he will be hack soon.
AAA
The Governor of the Bahamas recently made a visit to the Cutting
Estate in Gladstone, N. J. and had a chat with each of the seamen re­
cuperating there. Bros. Benson and Quinn were right up front whest
pictures were taken of the popular visitors. The TAM O SHANTER!
Club of Kearney supplied all the food and entertainment- for the occa­
sion.

A

A

A

Andy Smith made his first trip as Bosun. He is now shipping ouS
of New Orleans. Frank Saxon and Harold Miller have decided to take
a vacation, after stay aboard the same ship for over a year. Frsyifc
Saxon is going after his 2nd Mate's ticket. Peter Larsen who told us
there was a special Heaven for seamen, arrived safely after a 15 montih
voyage. One of the hrot;hers believed that the Heaven he speaks 'about
is right next door to Hell.

ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
MAY 17 TO MAY 29
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL '
6HIPPEO

350

291 ^

270

911

t:

REGISTERED

287

300

162

'829

•

ON HAND

206

1fi9

173

'/!!

�^

.

I Friday, June 11, T943;

THE

SEAFARERS' TOG

Page Three

I.T.F. Official Calls For Close
International Union Ties Now
ITF FRATERNIAL DELEGATES

ternational Transport Worker's
means when it is necessary to dis­
Federation, that we will then need
play such a solidarity. They learii
American Representative of
the greatest possible international
to know and to appreciate each
the I.T.F.
strength and international soldarother. They learn to know eacil
(T^ar/ of opening remarks to SIU ity, much greater than ever before;
other's standards of living. I think
for if we have failed in past, there
Agents' Conference)
and I sincerely hope that we all
is no doubt it is due to the fact
will profit by the lessons which are
President and brother unionists, that there were some weaknesses in
given to us now at such a great
I have to excuse, first of all, our our international chainwork. In
cost, under loss of lives.
Chinese Seamen's representative this way of thinking, Brother
and our Greek Seamen's represen­ President, I must value very strong­
I probably can end by paying
tative, who were given short no­ ly the cooperation which the Sea­
the highest tribute to the gallant
tice of this conference and have farers' International Union has of­
attitude of the American .seameni
not been able to attend. But I am fered us through its cooperation. It
for their brave struggle against ouf
very happy to be here with you, fills a gap which we have been
common enemy, and let me alsd
and 1 must say that I feel very looking forward to filling for so
especially pay a tribute to those of
much at case. Altho this is the first many years. We were far away
your seamen who have already lost
(Standing) William Post, Dutch Central Transport Workers; John
time that I have been at one of from each other. Perhaps the In­
their lives in this struggle against
S. Thore, Swedish Seamen's Union; Thorleif Eriksen, Norwegian
your conferences, I feel so, because ternational Tronsport Workers'
the brutal aggression of the opSeamen's Union; Ernest Raberg, Swedish Seamen's Union; and Fred
the Seafarers' International Union Federation has always been looked
fiftS-SQT.
&gt;'
Cla"^58«, Amalgnmat J^^ariisi.f^^fea'mei^s Union.
'
^ is an affiliate of th c^terna^jonaV
And, Brother President, if there
your paft'as a ji-fropear/*
(Seated) George Thompson, National Union of Seamen of Great
Transj^rt Workers' Federation anc body, which in fact it has never
is anybody present at your confer­
Britain; Omar Becu, Belgian Seamen's Union, and August Dijan,
also because I am convinced that been. It is a world-wide interna­
ence who would like to have some
Officers and Seamen's Union of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
there does not exist any group o: tional organization, helping trans­
information with regard to the
workers in the world who have port workers and seamen, in par­
structure of our International
such a natural and practical rela­ ticular, from the far east, from all cerely hope that we will prove to spare any effort or sacrifice to keep Transport "Workers' Federation,
tionship as the seamen.
parts of the world, but we have the whole world that international the way open and to make it pos­ with regard to our activities in the
never
succeeded in bringing a clos­ brotherhood is no longer an idle sible that we achieve that interna­ past and with regard perhaps also
1 extend to you all fraternal anc
tional objective we have been to the program which we can
er
link
with you, the American word.
courteous greetings and wishes in
reaching for for so many years. achieve for the future. Although
seamen.
behalf of the International Trans­
I think. Brothers, that especially
Hundreds of ship are sailing now­ it would take too much of your
port Workers' Federation and in
Tlae principles of international now, during the war, we will prove adays with international crews. time to develop such a program
behalf of the Coordinating Com­ brotherhood shown by the Seafar­ it. All of our seamen of the United
You find in some of your own ships that is in the hands, in fact, of our
mittee of the Allied Seamen's ers' International Union proves, in Nations and even some of some
a dozen nationalities. You find
main offices which are establishedi
Unions which are represented here our opinion, to be a good, sound neutral countries—^let me say, for
that they are on our ships. You in the United Kingdom since the
in the United States. I thank you and auspicious signal for the fu­ instance, our good Swedish sea­
find them on all these ships, sailing outbreak of the war, I will be
'in my personal name and also in ture. The part to be played by the men, they won't mind me
for the common goals.
happy to give any inforgiation you
the name of my brothers here pres­ American seamen after the war at saying so, and although their coun­
may desire and which I can give,
ent for the kind invitation you International Seamen's and Trans­ try is neutral—they are whole­
Those different nationalities,
have extended to us to attend your port Workers' conferences can be heartedly with us in our struggle, combined together, with one
{The highlights of the general
conference.
of tremendous importance to our doing their bit. Also those of some thought, and they prove again discussioji will appear in future «other neutral countries I say do not what international brotherhood sues of the LOG.)
No industry in the world has a international movement. We sinStronger international character
than the maritime industry. In no
other industry have the employers
-such a strong international coop­
eration as the ship owners through
their International Slupping Feder­
ation. Many .ship owners from dif­
the only course left open to the can enforce the full letter of thq
{Continued from Page 1)
ferent countries have close inter­ Edgar Leadlie
union is fo strictly enforce the agreements.
national agreements and confer- Arthur Engler
Regulations.
ei^ces relating to different shipping Louis Wolins .
' It has been suggested both to existing agreements and see that
The union stands ready at any
the union and to the operators in­ the operators pay overtime in every time to place in effect the Security
routes and trades.
0. A. Beaver
volved that there be further nego­ instance called for under the exist­ Watch Agreement which it nego­
Ship owners have even a regular Roger Kearns
tiation, but it is understood that ing contract.
tiated in good faith. But if the
practice to transfer the flag of their William Daley
The
only
way
the
union
can
this
suggestion
was
not
agreeable
WSA
insists in sabotaging our col­
ships to the flag of another coun- Douglas Raulhic
make
the
shipowners
live
up
to
to
the
union.
lective
bargaining with the ship­
B. SHULER
V..
when it suits thier financial
the
contract
is
by
getting
full
re­
This
is
to
advise,
therefore,
that
owners,
if it persists in attempts
P. BRADSHAW
imerest. The international compe­
these three proposed supplementary ports at the time the ships pay off to force upon us an inferior agree­
C,
SOSTELLO
tition between ship owners, especi­
agreements are, disapproved inso­ in this country. It is up to all ment to the one we negotiated,
TERRENCE D. O'CONNOR
ally among those who ha-ve no
far as they affect vessels bareboat ships crews and department dele­ then we'll sit tight and ride along
commercial agreements, have to a
chartered to or owned by the War gates to keep on their toes and re­ on our regular contracts. In the
great extent up until now been dis­
cord all shore liberty restrictions long run the WSA brain-boys are
Shipping Administration.
loyal and greatly unfair through
The War Shipping Administra­ and the ports in which they occur. going to find that it costs the ship­
the fact that there have al-ways
tion is ready to assist in taking A record shall be kept of the owners more to operate without a
existed such a great difference be­
whatever steps may be necessary to watches, when and how they are Security Watch Agreement than
tween the wages and working .conWill former members of the chew resolve this deadlock.
broken or maintained so the union with one.
•ditions of the seamen of one coun­ of S.S. Warrior who know Jack
Sincerely yours,
try with regard to the seamen of Wilson, former watertend'er, who
HUBERT WYCKOFF,
another country. The seamen have became ill while the vessel was beAssistant Deputy
thus far, and will continue to be, ng fumigated at Manila, please
Administrator for
the first victims of such an oli­ communicate with Col C. BerenMaritim.e I.abor Rehtions
garchy, if we do not find the means holtz, 312 Equitable Building, BaiWilliam Green, President
among ourselves to internationally tmore 2, Maryland.
In the past, skippers in most
American Federation of Labor
combat and end those practices, es­
every outfit have been breaking
Washington, D. C.
pecially after th ewar.
RAY HOLDER
and maintaining watches contrary
Your book and papers have been to the agreements and in many in­
Dear Sir and Brother:
Since many years, in fadt, since
found.
Get
them
at
headquarters
stances
have
restricted
shore
liberty
1919, and the Washington confer­
The Agents of this union met in conference in New York on
ence, our International has display­ office, Room 213, 2 Stone St., New in ports where shore liberty was
May
26 to June 1, and instructed mo to inform you and the Exe­
not restricted by law, the excuse
ed our best efforts to arrive at an York City.
cutive Board of the AFL, that we heartily approve the acceptance
was government restrictions, but
iilternational equalization of wages
of the United Mine Workers of America back into the AFL.
WILLIAM R. DIXON
the real reasons have been for se­
and working conditions of seamen.
It is the opinion of the AFL seamen on the Atlantic and Gulf
Please
contact
the
New
York
curity or safety of the ship with­
Some minor international conven­
Coasts
that the miners deserve the full support of the AFL in
Agent
next
time
you
are
in
town.
out the payment of overtime. The
tions were adopted through our
their
present
struggle against the War Labor Board and the Lit­
skippers attempt to jam this
efforts in Geneva under the aus­
tle
Steel
Formula.
The miners can best be support if they are
through without paying overtime
pices of the international labor or­
part
of
the
Federaton.
for those required to remain aboard
ganization; but the greatest part of
Moreover, the miners' long and chershed tradition of trade
ship after putting in a regular
our objects rerhain still to be
union militancy will bring to the ranks of the AFL much needed
Steward's
Department
S.S.
eight
hour
day.
achieved. T think that this will be
strength for the difficult days ahead.
Since Washington has disapprov­
our postwar task. But, in. order to West Gatomska have division of
We therefore urge immediate and favorable action upon
wages
due.
Collect
Mississippi
ed
of
the
Security
Watch
Agree­
do so, with the greatest possible
Presidebt John L. Lewis' application for readmittance to our
ment which would have brought
success, we must plan now, in or- Line, New Orleans.
Federation.
an orderly solution to this problem,
(&gt; der'to be ready when peace comes.
Fraternally yours,
Crew of S.S. Kofrfesi have attack
Tjhere is no doubt, in our opin­
ion, in the opinion of lal the or- bonus coming from Waterman Line,
JOHN HAWK
gantkations afiilliated v/ith the In­ 19 Rector St, N.Y.C.

By Omar Betcu

WSA SABOTAGES SEAFARERS*
SECURITY WATCH CONTRACT

'^sona I s

Seafarers Asks Miners
Return To AFL

•* » »

MONEY DUE

Remember — Don*t Sign
WSA'RMO Fink Cards

I.-'' k:

�Page Four

THE

SEAFARERS'

LOG

FrifJay, June 11, 194J

Resolutions Passed By Conference
Seamens*
Certificates

IF1^

;;Ji' „

l„E?

cial to the majority of the mem­
RESOLVED: That we issue trip the word, bona-fide trade unionism,
WHEREAS: The present scale
bership concerned, and
cards to these men, collect dues, and
of wages gives the Bos'n is only
WHEREAS: At this time cer­ and the strike and organizational
WHEREAS: This jumbled up $7.50 per month more than the
Resolution No. 1
tain recommendations are in order assessment on these trip cards, and rule is disintc?grating the efficiency A.B.'s and Q.M.'s, and
WHEREAS: Since the enact- for additional shipping rules, and be it finally
of the union to the detriment of
WHEREAS: It is practically
iucnt of the Merchant Marine
WHEREAS: We, the Agents
impossible to ^et experienced A.B.'s
RESOLVED: That all agents the men on the ships, and
Laws of 1936, it has been the duty assembled here in" conference go on and patrolmen are hereby instruct
WHEREAS: The Union was or­ to assume the responsibility of
of the U. S. Steamboat Inspection record to add to the shipping rules ed to organize and join into the ganized for just that particular of Bos'n at this scale of wages, and
&amp; Navigation Service to issue cer­ for war time conditions, therefore union all persons who have U. S. purpose, to protect the men that
WHEREAS: Under a directive
tificates to applicants wishing to be it
Certificates, and meet with the re­ are on the ships, therefore be it '
issued by the U. S. Coast Guard an
go to sea, and having the qualifi­
RESOLVED: That each respec­ quirements of the union as per
experienced A.B. can act as Mite
RESOLVED: That members for a salary of $185.00 and there­
cations as prescribed by law, and
Article lU of the Seafarers Inter­
tive port be empowered to set
WHEREAS: The President of time limit as to when a man shall national Union, Atlantic and Gulf shall only be permitted to register fore be it
on the department shipping list
the U. S., in an Executive Order report aboard a ship when he has District Constitution.
RESOLVED: That' men who
that their union book indicates.
h^ empowered the U. S. Coast been dispatched, arid be it further
and if there arc no members in thel^'f^ three years discharges as A.&amp;
Security Watch
Guard to administer the U. S. Mer­
RESOLVED: That when the
union hall available, then the men who do sail as Bos'n shall be paid
chant Marine Laws that come un­ time limit is set in the various
Resolution No. 5
on the other shipping list that have at the rate of $150.00 per month,
der the jurisdiction of the Bureau ports, and a man who was dis­
WHEREAS: The Atlantic and the indorsement on their certificate and be it further
Marine Inspection Service, and
patched to a ship and who fails to Gulf District of the Seafarers In­ shall have preference to the job,
RESOLVED: That copies of this
WHEREAS: The U. S. Coast show up within that set time, that ternational Union has negotiated and be it further
resolution be forwarded to the
Guard has now given the R.M.O. another juan be dispatched to the securitjr watch agreements with
members of the W.S.A, ryl. t'T
any new'
of the W.S.A., the 'power of ap­
^^place, and be it i J^h-i
Waterman, South Atlantic and^ • RESOLVED:
Washington representative be in­
proving applicants for Merchant
RESOLVED: That the afore­ Mississippi Lines, such agreements member is initiated in the union, structed to contact the board
Marine certificates, which power mentioned member will not receive being designed to provide for ship he shall specify what dept. he de­ members to explain the necessity
sires to sail in to the Investigation
. rightfully and only belongs within any remuneration for being ship­ safety in war time, and
of this action.
Committee and such specification
the jurisdiction of the Coast ped, and be it further
WHEREAS: This agreement shall be inserted in his membership
f'
Guard, *and
RESOLVED: That if a man is was reached between the union and book when issued at Headquarters, Four-Watch System
WHEREAS: The R.M.O. is dis­ drunk or otherwise refuses to sail the operators through the regular
Resolution No. 10 .
and be it finally
criminating by not approving of the ship, that he be automatically collective bargaining apparatus,
WHEREAS: Due to the present
RESOLVED: That no member
applicants wishing to go to sea fined the sum of twenty-five with the aid and approval of the
conflict between the Axis Powers
who are below or above the age ($21.00). This to be notated in conciliation service of the U. S. shall be allowed to transfer from and the United Nations it has ber»
limits required by the U. S. Mari­ the remaik column in his member­ Dept. of Labor, and subject to the one department to another until come necessary to construct thou­
he has served six months in his par­
time Training Service for recruits, ship book by the agent in the port approval of the W.S.A., and
sands of new ships to carry food
ticular rating, without permission
and
where this has occurred, and be it
WHEREAS: The W.S.A. in­
and war materials to our Allies
from the membership.
\fTiEREAS: The R.M.O. is also finally
formed the union that it would
and armed forces in all parts of
discriminating against men who
RESOLVED: That this be give prompt attention and decision Vacation Clause
the world, and,
have been rejected by the armed adopted as a war time measure on this agreement, and
WHEREAS: The United States
Resolution No.-8
jforces for service, but arc physic­ with the recommendation that it
WHEREAS: Upon May 22,
Government, through its agencies,
ally abje to (perform duti^ on go on the referendum ballot at the 1943, Herbert Wyckoff, assistant
WHEREAS: The Seafarers In­ has trained and is still training
board vessels, and
next general election.
deputy administrator of the W.S.A. ternational Union, Atlanntic and thousands of seamen to man these
WHEREAS: The War Man­
informed the union and the op­ Gulf District have in some of their ships, and,
power Commission has issued a di­ MWEB and
erators that the W.S.A. disapprov­ agremcnts a clause where, in order
WHEREAS: After internation­
rective to Selective Service to give Bonus Demand
ed the agreement but desired fur­ for a person to receive vacation al commerce returns to peace time
consideration for deferment to ac­
ther discussions toward the impo­ benefits, it is necessary for him to levels, a large percentage of these
Resolution No. 3
tive Merchant Seamen who do not
sition upon the S.I.U. of the S.U.P. quit his vessel, and
war tiipe built vesseL will be laidWHEREAS: The Seafarers In security watch agreement, and
exceed 30 days ashore in between
WHEREAS: ^Fhis clause in this up, as they were after World War
tcrnational Union, Atlantic and
ships, and
WHEREAS: The S.U.P. agree­ section was incorporated into the No. 1, and,
WHEREAS: Under the terms of Gulf District are signatory to the ment covers only the Deck Dept., agreement at a time when shipping
WHEREAS: The laying-up of
©ur collective bargaining agree­ Statement of Principles, and in the while the S.I.U. covers all 3 depts. was very slack and
these ships will cre.i(te an unem­
Statement
of
Principle
the
duties
ments, the Union is duty bound to
and
WHEREAS: Due to the short­ ployment problem among the
supply crews to vessels on which of the Maritime War Emergency
WHEREAS: Other difference in age of seamen, this creates a dif­ workers of the American Merchant
Board
are
strictly
defined,
and
the Union has an agreement, and
East and West coast working con­
Marine, especially the seamen,
WHEREAS: The Board is duty ditions makes the S.U.P. agree­ ficult situation, therefore be it
WHEREAS: The R.M.O. IS
therefore,
RESOLVED: That the Sec'y.hindering the Unions' effort to bound by the Statement of Prin­ ment all but impossible of opera­
BE IT RESOLVED: That this
fullfill its obligations in supplying ciples to make decisions only in tion on S.I.U. ships, therefore be it Treas. stand instructed to contact Union go on record as in favor of
all S.S. Companies where the union
crews to vessels with which the cases where in the union and the
RESOLVEDr That delegates has a vacation section in the agree­ the Four-Watch-System to cope
union has collective bargainning employers have a dispute and can­
from the S.I.U. Agents Conference ments and re-negotiate an amend­ with the expected unemployment
agreements, and the Statement of not agree, and
now convened in New York pro- ment to the vacation section to al­ situation and that after the war
Policy agreed upon by the War
WHEREAS: The Board con­
cede immediately to Washington to low seamen who arc entitled to a the officials of the SIU of N.A^ ••
Shipping Administration, and the tends that they can, upon their
fight this move of the W.S.A. to vacation to receive same and-stay use their utmost efforts to negoti­
Union, therefor be it
own motion, make decisions, there­
ate agreements to incorporate the
intervene and upset our collective on board the ship and be it finally
RESOLVED: That to further fore be it
Four-Watch-System
in all the
bargaining relationship with the
RESOLVED: That this amend­
contribute to the all out war ef­
RESOLVED: That this con­ operators and use all means to
agreements and be it finally,
fort, the Seafarers International ference go on record and request force confirmation of tliis security ment to the section be limited for
RESOLVED: That we repledge
the duration of the war only.
Union, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District the board members to live up to watch agrement, and be it finally
ourselves not to strike any vesseb
urge Vice Admiral Russell R. the Statement of Principles and
during this war and that any mem­
RESOLVED: That should the Bosun Pay Scale
Waesche, Commandant of the U.S. only make decisions where there is
ber who advocates the slowing-up
W.S.A. continue its efforts to sa­
Resolution No. 9
. Coast Guard to rescind his order, a dispute between the union and
of transportation or strike (other
botage this agreement, the dele­
thereby enabling men who wish to the employers and they can not
WHEREAS: Under the Little than through the medium of thfe
gates shall be empowered- to take
go to sea and contribute their part come to an agreement, and be it
the problem directly to the War Steel Formula any inequality in Constitution) shall be expelled
towards our war effort to do so, further
Labor Board and/or other govern­ present wages can be taken up and from the Union as an obstruction­
and not be obstructed -by the dis­
'
RESOLVED: Tliat the board be ment agencies concerned with this adjusted, and
ist.
criminatory policy of the R.M.O., instructed to restore the port and
dispute.
and be it further
area bonuses that were in effect
RESOLVED: That we instruct prior to March 1st, 1943, and be it Department
our Sec.-Treas., John Hawk to finally
Transfers
forward copies of this Resolution
RESOLVED: That the board be
Resolution No. 7
to Pres. F. D. Roosevelt, Vice Ad­ instructed to immediately correct
miral Russell R. Waesche, Com­ the gross inequities that exist in
WHEREAS: Sydney Gretcher,
mandant of U.S.C.G., Mr. Paul V. the war risk insurance, namely re­ when he was acting Secretary- BULLARD, SAMUEL T
AB
McNutt, Chairman of War Man­ patriation limit of two years, and Treasurer of the Atlantic &amp; Gulf
BUSTIN,
L.
R
FOW
power Commission, and Congress­ lovr disability benefits.
District of the Seafarers* Interna­ CARTER, J. D
Messman
man Otis S. Bland, Chairman,
tional Union of North America is­
DE
LOACH,
B
Committee on Merchant Marine Trip Cards
A.B.
sued an order that all agents were
DIX,
DANNY
:
and Fisheries.
Oiler
instructed to register any member
Resolution No. 4
ELLIOTT,
ROBERT
of
any
repartment
on
the
shipping
Messman
Dispatching
WHE^REAS: Quite a few men
list that the member requested, GROOVER, CHARLES W
Messman
are
sailing aboard S.I.U. contract
Time Rule
providing
the
memb"?r
had
the
in­
HAMPTON,
JOHN
ships who do not have union books,
Fireman
&lt;
Resolution No. 2
dorsement on his certificate, re­
and
HAYMAN,
GEORGE
W.
Jr
3rd
Cook
gardless of what department his
WHEREAS; It has been the
WHEREAS: They enjoy tfie union book designated, and
HUGGINS, WOODROW
Deck Engineer
policy of the Agents Conferences same benefits aboard ship that
JERNIGAN,
LEROY
FOW
WHEREAS; This order has nev­
in the past to bring back to the union men have fuoght for, and
KILEY, MELVIN
_.
_ OS
membership certain recommenda­
WHEREAS: Some of these men er been rescinded by the union of­
Me
DANIEL,
THOMAS
J&gt;
2nd
Cook
ficially,
and
tions, and
make a trip or two and never make
Messman
WHEREAS: This system of or­ PICKETT, LOREN
WHEREAS: TTicse recommen- any effort to join tb« union, thereTXAYLOR,
FRED
;
Fireman
ganization
is
ilot
in
any
sense
of
dations have proven to be bcnefi- fore be it

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                <text>Vol. V, No. 12</text>
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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
AGENTS CONFERENCE TIGHTENS WAR OPERATIONS OF ATLANTIC AND GULF&#13;
WSA SABOTAGES SEAFARERS' SECURITY WATCH CONTRACT&#13;
THE SEAFARERS LOG SEDITIOUS?&#13;
BLASTS ANTI-UNION AIMS OF WSA-RMO&#13;
MERCHANT SEAMEN'S CLUB IN GLASGOW&#13;
I.T.F. OFFICIAL CALLS FOR CLOSE INTERNATIONAL UNION TIES NOW&#13;
RESOLUTIONS PASSED BY CONFERENCE</text>
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                <text>6/11/1943</text>
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                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
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                    <text>P^ABBRSJOQ
OFFICIAL OEGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
VOL, V.-

287

NE^ YORK, N. Y., FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 1943

No. 13

Macauley Would Muscle Men Into
Final Articles At Delivery Port
Deadline For F-D-R- NEW W.S^. MOVE AIMED AT DHISELING
A:irtio n On Fa set s t CONDITIO'NS AND TRANSPORTATION. RIDER
Captain Edward Macauley, Deputy Administrator of the WSA, has launched a newSmith-ConnallyBill vendetta
against the merchant seamen. He now wants to. muscle the men into signing
deep sea articles when they join a newly-commissioned ship at port of delivery. In a
Within 24 hours after the Seafarers Log goes to press, letter sent to the SIU on June 9 he admits that the present practice of signing deep-sea
the American workers will know whether or not the Roose­ articles only when the vereel has beeii loaded in port of sailing, is legal, still he wants the
velt Administration intends to declare open war upon their union to force its members to sign*
Macauley says that because the
unions. For within this period the President must either on for a complete voyage before port of delivery to loading port. men
on coastwise articles some­
did this happen?
Let
veto the fascist Smith-Connally Bill or allow it to become the ship has been delivered and be­ the"When
times
sign off in the loading port
Captain break out his figures
fore the seamen have a chance to
law.
the
ships
miss their convoys. This
tion" of such plants taken over by look her. over. This amounts to and prove that a SIU ship missed a

is a lot of WSA-double talk. Here's
convoy because of this practice.
the Government. The same pen­ forced labor if we ever saw it.
why: "When a crew taktes a ship
"We
don't
know
what
the
Cap­
alties are provided for "aiding
There are several intersting items
from
the port of delivery, she sails
tain
has
up
his
sleeve,
but
it's
our
such strike or lockout, giving "di­ in the Captain's letter, but before
rection or guidance" to it or pro­ we take them up, we should like guess that any delays he may have empty. When she arrives in the
viding funds "for the conduct or to comment on the timing of the in mind can be traced to the bung­ port of loading it takes at least two
direction thereof," through pay­ request for this radical change of ling of the WSA and not to the weeks to stow the cargo, and
ment of strike or unemployment the shipping ndes. A brief 9 days union. Sure ships have missed con­ usually a couple of more weeks is
consumed waiting for a convoy.
benefits.
before the Captain sent us this voys because of crewing difficul­
This
affords the shipowner ample
3—Gives the National War La­ letter, the Agents of the Atlantic ties—the shortage of rated men.
AFL President William Green
time
to
get a deep sea crew, and al­
led the forces of organized labor in bor Board statutory recognition and Gulf coast were in conference But this is not the fault of the
so
gives
the new crew ample time
appealing to President Roosevelt to empowers it to intervene in dis­ in New York and begged Macauley union—^it is the fault of the WSA
to
look
over
the ship, inspect the
putes on its own motion, author­ to attend. The purpose of, the con­ which is spending millions of dol­
veto the Bill.
articles
and
decide
if they want to
lars to train unrated men and po­
•J'The workegs of this country izes the Board to issue subpoenas ference was to increase the efficisign
on.
tential finks, and ignoring possi­
.would never become reconciled to for the attendance of witnesses, ehcy of East &amp; Gulf Coast opera­
If the commissioner arrives to
bility of aipgrading good un-ratec
but
restricts
the
Board's
present
tions
and
to
clarify
all'
the
rules
this legislation," Mr. Green informsign
articles the first day she is in
union
men.
It
looks
as
if
some­
, ed the President. "They would right to order union-shop settle­ and aims of the WSA.
the
loading
port, it is natural that
body
is
putting
the
heat
on
Ma­
But Macauley was too busy to
' protest against it and rebel against ments.
the
men
will
stall because they
cauley
for
East
Coast
bungling,
4—^Provides that no member of attend or to send a representative.
it in the event that it would be­
want
a
chance
to
get familiar with
and
he
is
trying
to
make
the
sea­
Then, after all the Agents were
the B^rd shall be permitted to par­
came the law of the land.
the
sliip
and
resent
being pushed
men
and
this
union
the
scapegoats.
Outstanding provisions of the ticipate in any decision in which dispersed to the various ports,
around
in
this
mariner.
final version of the Connally-Smith such member has a direct interest when there were no longer any op­
What is also involved in this
Bill adopted by both .Houses of as an officer, employe or represen­ portunity for a face to face discus­
of
the shipowners and WSA to sa­
tative of either party to the dis­ sion of the problems, Macauley dic­
Congress follow;
botage
transportation riders which
tated this letter demanding a major
1—^Empowers the ^President to pute.
the SIU had before the war and
change
in
union
operation.
This
is
5—Requires a 30-day "cooling
take over in behalf of the Govern­
which were frozen for the dura­
off"
^ri(^ before a strike may be the typical act of a bureaucrat,
ment any war plant, mine or man­
tion of the war by the Statement
fearful
of
a
democrat
exchange
of
Employe representatives
ufacturing facility threatened with called.
of Policy. Some of the shipown­
ideas,
jealous
of
his
privileges,
dis"interruption of production by a must give notice of intention to
ers are now attempting to kick out
The city of Boston paid tribute
Strike or other labor disturbance. strike to the Secretary of Labor, fainful of the common man who
these riders, stating the WSA will
works
for
a
living.
the National War Labor 'Board and
to the merchant seamen on June
2—Imposes fines up to $5,000
not
approve them, and the union
As
for
the
letter
itself,
Macauley
the National Labor Relations
first by dedicating to them a mall
and a year's imprisonment, or both,
has
been
appearing to Hdbert Wy-"
Board. The latter body is directed charges that "offshore operation of on the Boston Common. The mer­
upon any person who may "coerce,
choff
to
uphold the Statement of
to conduct a" secret ballot election newly - commissioned vessels has chant seamen mall was one of five
instigate, induce, conspire with, or
Policy
and
the Statement of Prin­
been delayed and impaired from dedicated, the others being tributes
encourage any person to interfere on the proposed strike among af­ time to time to the extent that
ciples, and authorize the operators
to men fallen in the Army, Navy,
by lockout, strike, slow-down or fected employes before the expira­ convoys have been missed by the
squeeze play is a move on the part
Coast Guard and Marine Corps.
other interruption, with the opera­ tion of the 30-day notice.
to put such riders on ships' articles,
continuation of a peacetime" prac­
SIU Agent John Mogan deserves
guaranteeing
transportation — as
tice of seamen in signing coast­ much of the credit for having won
wise articles to bring the ship from for the seamen this tribute. He was the custom prior to the
war. To date Mr. Wyckoff has
campaigned for the mall and was
been too busy with WSA in­
imtrumcntal iii having a resolution
ner politics to even give the
passed by the City .Coimcil which
union the courtesy of a reply. It
set in motion the entire machinery.
is
also likely that he is stalling on •
Honorable Franklin D. Roosevelt
Councilmen
Hurley
and
Russo
the
question, giving Macauley a
President, United States of America
read
into
the
official
Council
record
chance
to shove the signing of deep
June
8,
1943
.White House
.u
a letter received from Brother sea articles at port of delivery
Washington, D. C.
Mr. John Hawk, Sec.-Treas.
Mogan thanking them and the Bos­ down our throat. For should the
20,000 AFL seamen on thfr Atlantic &amp; Gulf Coast, members of the Seafarers International Union
ton press for supporting the move
men be muscled into deep sea arSeafarers. International Union,-urge you to veto the fascist Smith- New York City
to honor the seamen.
Dear Sir and Brother:
Connally Bill now on your desk.
{Continued on Page 4)
The maritime mall was dedicated
This bill is a stab in the back of organized labor and will result. ' Thanks greatly for your letter in the presence of 100,000 Boston
What Is a
If passed, in justified resentment and resistance on the part of all of June 7 with copy of Communi­ school children and delegates from
cation addressed by the Seafarers the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the
freedom loving workers.
SCAB?
Close to 1,000 members of this union have lost their lives at sea International Union of North Am­ BostoiT Municipal ^uncil, the
"After the God had finished the
while delivering supplies to the war fronts of the world. They died erica to President Green of the United Spanish War Veterans, the
rattlesnake,
the toad, the vam­
believing that this war was being fought against fascism—both at American Federation of Labor.
Disabled American Veterans, the
pire, He had some awful sub­
home and abroad. The living comrades of these dead heroes will keep
I appreciate very much indeed Department of Massachusetts and
faith with them and will continue to oppose fascism whether it ap­ the action of your organization in the Jewish War Veterans of the stance left with which ho made
a scab. A scab is a two-legged
pears in Berlin or Washington.
this matter, and I hasten to extend United States. Brother Mogan was
animal
with a corkscrew soul-—
We urgently request that you deal a blow against the domestic to each member all good wishes for invited to appear as a spe^er but
a water-logged brain, a combin­
fascists by vetoing the un-American Smith-Connallyi bill.
their future well-being.
was unable to attend because of ation backbone made of jelly
Sincerely
yours,"
his
presence at the Agents Confer­ and glue."—Jack London.
JOHN HAWK
L
JOHN L. LEWIS
ence in New York City.
The Smith-Connally Biir follows
the pattern set by Hitler and "Mus­
solini and the Cerman and Italian
capitalists. It denies the workers
many of their fundamental rights,
restricts legitimate trade unionism,
and will bring upon this country
chaos in labor relations.

Mogan Prominent
In Boston Tribute
To Merchantmen

Text Of S.I.U. Letter To
F.D.R. On Conn.ally Bill

John Lewis Thanks SIU
For Supporting Miners*
Return To Federation

•

'f

�•

THE SEAFARERS' LOG

Page Two

II

Friday, June 2?, 1943

SEAMEN NEED POST WAR I

for a French seamen, whether they are French, EnglisI^
THOMPSON: Not yet.
LUNDEBERG: Do you know whether the Giraud Slavs or what they are, without, representatio:?. by the sea-s
ships that were taken over in the African campaign were men. And if we can do anythmg on any of these thingi
we want to help you and we want to stop that kind ofi
chartered to the American Government?
nonsense.
Because, it doesn't do you any gCK&gt;d and it does­
BECU: They were and are under tlie control ,of the
n't
do
us
any
good, in the long run, and we want to work
W^af Shipping Administration. The a^ecment was con=
together
with
foreign seamen. We affiliated with I.T.F,,
eluded in North Africa, according to information which
as
Brother
Becu
told you. We want to cooperate and work"
has been given me by the War Shipping Administration,
concluded between Giraud and General Eisenhower, with along with you people, because we know that when thia
the agreement of General Anderson, representative of the war is over they are going to try to move in on tic
Participating Are Harry Lundeberg, British
again, the seamen on the Danish or French or Americaqi
Government.
President SIU; Matthew Dushane,
LUNDEBERG: They are run by the American War seamen, and we have got to have class cooperation on St
world-wide basis to stop the nonsense they did after thq
Washington Representative SIUj and Shipping Administration?
BECU: By the American War Shipping Admmistfatlon. last war that you guys are familiar with the conditiani.
Omer Been, American Representative
which happened on a world-wide basis after the last war.
LUNDEBERG; With the French crews?
BECU: With French crews. Tliey are acting on behalf I do not know what is going to happen after this war isi
of the International Transport Work=
of the French authorities of North Africa. The ships are over. I think it is going to determine who is going to sil?'
, ers Eederatiojj,
is^FoiugTP. haye .C,
oaTc^bddt chaft£lT^ Lf aiw Wai-3liippiug-Ad5aa!m;£rA'dsiii •-25 tht -pease table, and
voice.
Of
course,
that
is
a
little
far
ahead,
but wc feel
and the Giraud group has set up a special department for
DUSHANE: I understand there is some kin?^ an the merchant marine. It is under the supervision of Vice. it is about time they started to talk about those things ami
ready on a world-wide basis to protect the seamen's
agreement reached between your governments,
Admiral Lemonnier in North Africa.
ferent governments here that you boys come from and the
DUSHANE: Have the French seamen any representa­ interests, because there is no group of workers that is more closely allied than the seamen.
i
United States Government, that you can not take free part tion at all on this committee?
i
So, we have certain conditions in the United Statd
in" legislation effecting foreign seamen in Washington
BECU: No.
which you are all aware of, divisions in the labor move^ •
Now, corref t me if I am wrong in this. ^ You Can not use
ment. We have the C.I.O. and the A. F. of L. We havd
any influence to correct some of the immigration laws dmthe same in the seamen's field. One particular branch of
ing the war and you are not supposed to take any active,
the seamen's movement belongs'to the A. F. of L., West
part, while in this coimtry, in any form of a labor move­
BECU: I may point out to you. it is a very pecu­ Coast, East Coast, and Great Lakes. I do not know whether
ment for the progress of your men.
liar position. You know that the Vichy Government has you people know we will never make peace with the Com-*
BECU: I think it would be rather difficult for us, as dissolved all labor unions and collective agreements whjch
foreign organizations, to interfere even to the smallest ex­ existed before the war. Without any consultation with munist unions.
it is either going to be us or them. I just wanted to give
tent, with your national legislation. If we should find
the seamen's representatives they gave •them another con­ you that for your information.
. something in your legislation wliich wOuld hamper us, tract, enforced upon them another contract, and up to
Now, another thing. We have a good representative iq
-which would be a difficulty for us, I think we could do now the Giraud crowd have not recognized any seamen's
Washington
to impress the mnds of the legislative body
that only through the channel of the American organiza­ union. And more than that, they have refused to give us
down
there.
We have a representative- down there and we.
tion, the Seafarers International to confer with the Inter­ the authorization to send seamen's representatives to North
national Transport Federation and ask them to intervene Africa. We have strongly protested against it through the can get other ways and means to help you with this prob­
with your government officials and the goveriunent de­ French Seamen's Union which has its main offices in Eng­ lem. I can realize your difficult problem. There is ntf
partments in order that a decision would be taken which land. I understand from a cable I received a few days , question about it, inasmuch as you have got two differenf
•would favor us and be favorable to the men in our work. ago from the International Transport Federation, as well factions, some in the United States here and some thq
This is true, for instance, in Washington, where there as from the French Seamen's Union in England, that the other party and some in England. Well, we can not allow,
exists a United Nations Government Committee, discuss­ position is progressing in a favorable way and that very no matter who they are, Eisenhower or anyone else, to.
make an agreement for seamen like they were chattels,
ing the position of allied seamen in your country. They
shortly, perhaps, a new French Seamen's Union will be slaves. So, this is what you are going to work for, with­
discuss the question of deportation, the question of setting
set up in North Africa.
out consulting them or have their help neither. I saw men
up maritime courts in your country for the allied govern­
LUNDEBERG: Brother Becu, these agreements between when I was in Washington, and we will have to continue'
ments and so forth. Wc have asked to be represented and
the War Shipping Administration and the Giraud regime, and find out what kind of a swindle went &lt;jjver. The War
.J)e able to attend the conferences through monthly meet­
what is the wages, can you tell me, approximately?
Shipping Administration, .they stated they want the con-ings, and we have been refused to sit on that committee.
^ BECU; Well, their wages were not communicated to the trol of the shipping interests of- this country. You will find
men when they left Noth Arfica. They were left entirely how the policy makers and all the big shots got enough
in the dark and that is the awkward position in which from the ship owners branch and we have got to watch '
they are now. ^'e have reorganized the French seamen them. The same thing with a South Americau ship under
DUSHANE: Brother Becu, there is one question that is coming from North Africa who have almost all joined or the Panamanian flag.
^
not quite clear in my mind on this deportation of alien ' , re-joined their union. They are. in full agreement
seamen. You state thar they should be deported back to with the people who are sailing for De Gaulle, and we are
the countries where the pople have set up a government to now forming one group of seamen, notwithstanding the
represent the people of that particular country. W^ell, fact that in government circles there seems to exists a
BECU: I have followed the actions of the Seafarers In- ,
there seems to be a contention regarding some of th^e division of opinion and a division in policy.
ternational
Union very closely. You, on behalf of the
I want to say this, perhaps, to make it quite clear to
nations over there as to just who docs represent them. I
Seafarers
International
Union, together with different otlier
think it is a dangerous situation when the seamen get you. The French seamen, when we had our. first general
seamen's
unions,
rigned
a policy-making statement with
I , juggled around between two groups of people who claim meeting here with them, they raised the question which
your
War
Shipping
Administration
that your conditions
they represent them and the seamen get in the middle. conditions would be applied to them. We-did not know
will
also
apply
to
all
bare
boat
chartered
ships. And I
They are the ones that are being tossed around. Where anything. We did not know with whom to deal in order
would these men be deported to? There is the Vichy to have collect bargaining for them, but we knew that think you have there a very farsighted policy in doing sol
French goveriunent, and the government that was set up the U. S. War Shipping Administration were the charter­ And, as you said, it would constitute a danger to the
ih North Africa, then General De Gaulle has one set up in ers of those ships. We have asked the charters, the War American seamen, as it would have constituted a danger
England. You also have the case of the Polish seamen, and Shipping Administration, with whom we should deal to to the Britieh seamen, if those seamen of those chartered
I think there is a little confusion amongst the Jugoslavian have a collective agreement and if they would help us in ' ships would sail "under lower conditions than you had.
In the long run, the Government may take the position,
order to establish the right to collective bargaining for
seamen. Where would they be deported to?
BECU: Brother, as far as I know, this applies only to these seamen. The War Shipping Administration stated ".Why should we have our own ships when we
the French seamen. I do not think it applies to the Jugo­ that such an agreement was concluded in North Africa can run foreign ships under charter on better,
slavian Government or to the Polish Government, because without collective bargaining, enforced upon the men, conditions?" And, if your government does so, mora
chose governments are recognized by all the other and that the British wage and bargaining conditions were particularly all ship owners will be bound to do so, be­
Governments of the United Nations. It applies certainly to be applied to those French seamen. If, however, the cause the ship owners, we all know have no national feel­
to the French seamen, but I do not know of any case, at French wage and working conditions would be better or ings when it comes to dollars and cents. That is in every
this moment of the deportation of French seamen. Some higher than British wage and working conditions-:-the country the «ame. What do they care whether they ex­
ploit their ships under their own flag or under a foreign
of them who arrived here, you will have read in the pa­ French conditions would remain in force. .
pers, from North Africa, the socalled Giraud group, have LUNDEBERG: On a charter vessel to the War Shipping flag, as long as they have more benefit when they do it
left their ships and gone over to the De Gaulle group, in Administration then under such arrangement they also under a foreign flag? That is the thing I referred to in my
full freedom. They have let them go over there, but if man the vessels themselves? In other words, of course, the speech I have made in coming here, how they have always
deportation was open with regard to French seamen, it vessels are manned by the French seamen. But the War transferred ships from one flag to another. Fake transfers,
Shipping Administration becomes the ones that pay the because they remained the owners' ships. Fake transfers
could only be to the group to which they berunged.
because of the fact that they can run the ships under a
De Gaulle has a number of French ships under his con­ wages and everything else?
foreign flag at a much lower cost than under their owq
BECU: Yes.
trol, ships which have been chartered to the British Gov­
LUNDEBERG: The War Shipping Administration then flag, because ih some countries there exists no maritime
ernment. Now, since the invasion of Africa and the lib­
eration of Africa, Giraud has quite a number of ship under has no business to make a deal with-either Giraud or social legislation, there was no bonus, there was no collec­
ids control which have been chartered to your country, but De Gaulle to the effect that these vessels should have Eng­ tive agreement, they could pay what they wanted to pay
nil in the international pool—there seems to be a pool of lish wages, because the men on those ships are entitled to them.
LUNDEBERG: Some time ago, prior to the war and
all allied nations. The questions of allocating the ships to American wages. Here is the way we feel about this thing
One country or another are agreed upon. So far as the here. The War Shippings Administration, whether you the entrance of the ynited States into the war, we had the.
Frenchmen are concerned, you haVe indeed two groups. know it or not, as far as we are concerned, is strictly the same conditions on the Pacific Coast, where four Danish
There is no national committee or any national govern- type of owners that we have to fight from every angle ships were interned. The American Government took them
itaent or any provisional government, or anything of that and watch them for what we can obtain. When the War over and sent them out under the Panamanian flag and
Sort. That may come in the very near future, and then Shipping Administration asks a policy-making body to we started to raise hell, because in those days we could
also that question will be straightened out. But as far as turn around and take the crew from the foreign ships take direct action, and we took a strike vote on the Pa­
I know, and I do not think that even Brother Thompson under charter below* the American scale of wages, that cific Coast and told Admiral Land, "If you are going tb
from the British National Union of Seamen knows of any endangers. our conditions, and furthermore this war is run Panamanian ships out of Frisco, then you will run no
case of French seamen who have been deported back to supposed to be a war for the four freedoms. These people ships." As the result of that action, we didn't have toi
have no business to turn around and make an agreement go on strike, Admiral Land flew nto Frisco and they turnEngland.

Highlights Of RoundTable Discussion At
Agentsi' Conference

Giraud Is Anti-Labor

Deportation Tangle

Shipowners' Dodge

I

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Friday, June 2f, 1943

THE SEAFARERS' LOG

Page Three

ITERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY
ed those ships into the American Flag, with the same countries ,sailing for the nvoment on Panamanian and even
crews, of course. I mean the Danish seamen stayed on American vessels. Prior to the war there was the so-called
the ships and they transferred their books to the Sailors Belgian, Dutch seamen's clubs, one was called the Scandi­
Union of the Pacific, the
Coast Union, and we navian Seamen's Club, which has been dissolved. Later the
thought at that time that the same action would have director or manager of that club became the director of
been taken on the Atlantic Coast. There was quite a num­ the Panamanian division of the National Union of Seamen.
ber of ships which flew the Panamanian flag on account Another was called the European Committee for Seamen.
of the NeutraUty Act. However, on the Atlantic Coast Another was called the Greek Seamen's Union. Another
we were hampered. Through the efforts of the National one, Yugoslav Seamen's Union, and who was exactly in
Maritime Union, the Communist Party controlled that the background, we do not know. But they were trying
seamen's union here. They were very much in favor of to get foreign seamen under control through those unions,
ships which flew the Panamanian flag, due to the fact that and the foreign seamen were pressed by them to leave
they were very much interested in their so-called Pana­ their ships and were lured away from their ship to a great
manian Division, trying to move in on the foreign seamen extent. In the same picture came at that time the German
to advance and establish themselves as the one and only General Consul paying for board and lodging for men who
union for all seamen. In other words, they were really jumped their ship in America.
moving into the territory of the foreign seamen's unions,
It was the slogan then, "This is a capitalistic and imthe I.T.F., the Norwegian and| British unions.
. peto risk-ysisr life fcr-thorat
You won't see many ship on the Pacific Coast running What the hell have you to do with that war? You have
under this flag, but you have plenty of them on this coast. already gone once to war. Are you going to risk your skin
That is going to be one of those conditions that we are and life again on all those ships or are you going to live
faced with in the American seamen's movement. We in America, in this free, democratic coimtry?" A lot of
could do the job on lots of thmgs here, but we have the our men fell for it. Some of our ships were held up
split movement and the Panamanian edition of the through that, that was the policy. Our men were lured
N.M.U , they would like to make it very strong and they away and our men were taken into the Panamanian Di­
plan to steal men from time to time from the other unions. vision of the N.M.U.
Perhaps I do not know how much success they have had,
I will give you an instance. Holland had quite a large
I do not know how much success you have had, but if merchant marine with a large number of Dutch seamen,
you are not too tired, I think it would probably be better approximately 18,000. They set up their own organiza­
ipr you to explain it to the delegates here, because I think tion over here, the organization they had in Eiurope called
it is very interesting. We have agents from every port, the Dutch Central Transport Workers' Organization. Mr.
and they are going back to their various locals and they Christensen of the Panamanian Divsion of the N.M.U.
called* a meeting together for Dutch seamen, and two
should know of those angles, if you will give this, Becu.
BECU: There is no doubt that the Panamanian Division very loyal delegates of the Dutcb Seamen's Union grasped
of the National Maritime Union afiSliates seamen from all that occasion to go to that meeting, and tell Mr. Christen-

son that they would speak to the Dutch seamen. It wa|
accepted. They did speak in their language to the Dutcl^
Seamen; our good Dutch friends who are still now tlui
representatives over here of the Dutch Seamen's Unioi|
spoke to the men. There were hundreds of them. Thej
said, "What they are trying to do is to lure yoii
away from your own union. We do not know how
faith you will have in yotir own tinion, but there is ond
thing, they are going to enlist you into another union. If
you go to that table they will enlist you in a new unloa
which they are trying to set up for you in America, an4
if you enlist on that table, you are going to enlist in you?
own union, the National Union."
W'hen the meeting was over, all joined their own Dutcli
Union.
The whole situation, I must say, changed on the 21sfl
of June, 1941, when Rtissia came into the war. Thero
was. no
-l-uring aw-ay. of
4$
so forth.
Our men are still belonging to their own union, whicU
must be, according to our opinion, as strong as possible
in order to be able to continue right on when we go back
after the war to our respective countries.
I said in the beginning, some of our seamen may sai|
on Panamanian ships, where Panamanian ships have mem«
hers of the Ntional Maritime Union shipped on then^
those sailing from this city. We can not do much abou?
it. We can not do anytldng about their agreements be­
cause we have no contracts with American ships. The
members of the allied unions sailing on the Panamanianj
ships are just those who have deserted their ships before
the 8 th of April, 1942, unless they have been granted the
authorization by their National authorities. In other words
as from that date, no foreign seamen would any longetj
be allowed to go on American or American operated ships,
without the agreement of the Government concerned.

(Report of June 17)

fRtPOWT orv
^ASHIrvGTorv.

Maritime War
Emergency Board:

and seventy one cents ($1.71) per
day. They then are to deduct five
per cent on the balance.
Some companies are deducting a
straight five per cent Victory tax
on all the seamen earnings, with­
out allowing any exemptions. AJl
agents are cautioned to check with
the men and see what the compan­
ies are deducting and see if any
exemptions are being allowed.
For the information of all oui
agents they can quote "Interna^
Revenue Title 26—(T.D. 5249)|
and dated March 27, 1943, signed
by Guy T. Helvering, Commission­
er of Internal Revenue,- filed with
the Division of the Federal Regis­
ter, March 29, 1943." The parti­
cular part dealing with the exemp­
tion can be found on page No. 4}|
(C).
The I. R. has sent a letter td
the Luckenbach company for anl
explanation on the tax with-heldl
in Brother Stevens case, and as soon|
as they answer, I'll advise hiin
through my weekly report.
All members are cautioned
keep all their receipts that th^
have received when Victory tax or
any other taxs are being withheld
from their wages, as they will be
reimbursed when they file a vic­
tory tax report next March.
Beginning July 1st, 1943, em­
ployers are required to deduct and
withhold a tax upon the wages of
tl^ir employes. This is a tax of 20
per cent of the excess of each wage
payment over the WITHHOLD­
ING EXEMPTION.

R. W. SWEENEY, SIU Patrol­
man, N. Y.—S.S. Pan Gulf was in
Newport Wales when port was un­
der attack. Board has ruled that
crew is entitled to a-tack bonus.
_ • BY MATT44BW PtfSHAME-* '
S.S. Charles Brantley Aycock was
in Newport Wales and crew con­
tends that there was an attack on required to work. Checking to see must be obtained. (C) It might be gional board No. 10 on April 30,
this day. Board claims that from where and by whom the crew are a prodigious task to break down 1943. Headquarters of the War
information that they have re­ to be paid. Will advise when this red tape, regulations and barriers Labor Board have no data on Can­
set up in foreign countries against nery workers case.
ceived there was no attack on this is finally straightened out.
the importation of food to be sup­
ARTHUR
BURKE,
SUP
Pa­
Sec. Treas. of the SIU in San
day. Suggest that the patrolman
plied to our vessels.
trolman,
San
Francisco:
S.S.
Fitz
Francisco can get data on the case
re-check and get written state­
ments from the crew. S. S. Raphel John Porter was lying at Bahia,
The WSA have adopted the fol­ by contacting the AFL members
Semmes was in Avinmouth and Brazil, crew were granted shore lowing rules to vessels in lieu of the of the WLB in the 10th regional
district at San Francisco, Cal.
crew contend that there was an leave and were notfied to be on depots—
attack and that It could be veri- board at 11 A.M. Ship left the
1. The division of operations has
, fied by the ship's log. Board claims dock at 8 A.M. and due to a port ordered operators and agents to Legislation:
chairman Henry M. Jackson of
that there was no attack on this order crew was forbidden to go provision all vessels for the Nine
the Sub Committee on unemploy­
date. Advise to re-check on the aboard their vessel due to being Month Trip.
dates and the time that the crew made up in convoy. Bum boats
2. When vessels are homeward ment Insurance of the committee
contends that there was an attack. were forbidden to take the three bound and have food supplies on Merchant Marine and Fisheries,
LOUIS COFFIN, SIU Patrol­ men who were left behind on aboard which will not be consum­ will consider in open hearings,
man, N. Y.—S.S, Francis- Marion board. Board h%s ruled that under ed before reaching United States Thursday, June 24, 1943, at 10
was anchored at Immingham, Eng­ the circumstances crew is entitled ports, tills food, at the discretion A.M., committee prints No. 1 and
land, and crew contended port was to compensation for loss of person­ of the master, will be transferred No. 2 dated June 7, 1943, relative
under attack. Board has ruled that al effects.
to: (a) War Shipping Administra­ to tmemployment Insurance for
a bonus is payable. S.S. Schoharie
tion vessel needing supplies, (b) Merchant Seamen.
Recruitment
and
was in Cardiff, Wales, and crew
The Army and Navy, (c) Lend- International
contend port was under attack. Manning:
Lease Administration, (d) War
Holding a conference on Thurs­ Relief and Civilian Rehabilitation Labor Office:
Board has stated that from." the in­
formation that they have received day, June 17, and the maritime Administration.
As per the decision of the agents
there was no attack on this date. unions and operators are invited to
assembled in New York, enclosed
Advise Patrolman to re-check on send representatives there. The Fish Cannery Workers
ta the respective headquarters of
dates and* time crew claim that agenda consists of the following Union of the
the SIU are the catlogs of all the
subjects—^Manpower Requirements,
there was an attack.
material
that the ILO has regard­
J. E. LAPHAM, SIU Patrolman, Cooperative efforts in recruiting Pacific, SIU:
ing Merchant Seamen. Any ma­
Boston—S.S, King Woolsey was experienced officers and seamen,
Petitioned the Secretary of La­ terial that the Union may require
anchored off South End in the upgrading, manning procediures, se­ bor and requested that the Caimery for the agents can be had by send­
Thames River when London was lective service and many addition­ workers be excluded from execu­ ing to the Washington Office of
All members are cautioned tcj
fill out "Form W-4, U. S. Treas-i
bombed. Crew entered claim for al topics which the conferees may tive order No. 9240, which pro­ the ILO.
ury Dept. Internal Revenue Ser­
bonus. Board has ruled that the wish to discuss.
hibits the payment of time and a
vice-Employes Witholding Exemp­
(Report of June 19)
limits for bonus claims when ves­
half for Saturday afternoon and
tion Certificate." They should fill
sels are in the Thames River and
Sunday. Have been advised that
out one of these forms every time
an attack is made in London pr
Sometime ago I sent a request to the Secretary of Labor has granted Internal Revenue:
within the vicinity of the Thames, the WSA that they establish food an exemption to FISH CANNERY
Brother James L. Stevens of Bal­ that they become employed on a
ends within the limits of Grave- depots in England, South Africa workers in the States of California, timore, while employed on one of ship, in this manner the companies
send and Tillbury, the Estuary is and the Far East. Have been'ad­ Oregon, Washington and Alaska. the Luckenbach scows earned $1,- will be compelled to grant an ex­
not within th^se limits. Advise the vised that due to problems present­ It is now possible for fish cannery 768.48 from 11-6-42 to 5-19-43, emption allowable under the law.
Patrolman to re-check on the po­ ed in establishing these depots, it is workers to receive time and a half and the company deducted $234.60
Advised all agents to contact
sition of where the vessel was lying necessary at this time to postpone for Saturday afternoons and Sun­ for victory tax.
their local Internal Revenue office
when the attack occured. Have setting up food depots, due to the days, or other payments as per
Contacted the Internal Revenue and get copies of "Circular WT"
been advised that the U. S. Army following reason—(A) Perishable their collective bargaining agr-e- bureau and they have advised me of June 4th, 1943, and post in the
^has agreed to pay wages for the commodities would require refrig­ ments.
that no company has any right to umon halls so that all our mem­
crew of the Benjamin Harrison eration &gt;(B) Adequate personnel
PAULINE FURTH, Sec.-Treas. deduct any victory tax from a".;- bers can familiarize themselves as
who were repatriated m the U. S. for the protection and mainten­ FCWU, San Diego CaJif.: Reduc­ seamen, unless the company first to the law.
A. T. Shawnee and the crew was ance of warehouses and supplies tion plant case was settled by re- allow an exemption of one dollar
{Continued on Page 4)

.,Uv.Aa

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�Page Four

SEAFAREHS LOG

k

Friday, June 25, 1943

THE SEAFARERS' LOG

Published by the

il

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and J5j?ilf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor
HARRY LUNDEBERG - - r - - - Vresideni
110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

Secy-Treds.

2 Stone Street, New York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE

-

-

- 'Washington Rep.

424 Jth Street, N. W.,Washington, D. C.

Directory of Branches
PHONE
ADDRESS
2 Stone St
Diepatcher'a Office....... BOwIiins Green 9-3430
Agent
BOwIing Green 9-3437
BOSTON....
330 Atlantic Ave.
Liberty 40S7
BALTIMORE. ........... 14 North Gay St.
Calvert 4B39
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St
Lomhard 76SI
NORFOLK
23 Commeccial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS.
309 Chartree St.
Canal 3336 .
SAVANNAH.....
.218 Eaet Bay St....
Savannah 3-1728
TAMPA.
423 Eaet Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
MOBILE
Ss So. Conception St.. ...Dial 2-1392
PUERTO RICO...i.
4S.Ponce de Leon
Puerto de Tlerm
GALVESTON.....
219 20th Street
Galveston 8-8043
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway..
BRANCH
NEW YORK

PUBLICATION OFFICE;
ROOM: 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwUng Green 9-8346

Washington Report

NEW W.S.A. MOVE AIMED AT CHISELING
CONDITIONS AND TRANSPORTATION RIDER
(Continued from Page 1)
tides when the ship first comes of HERE IS MACAULEY'S PHONEY LETTER
the ways, they have less chance o:'
ON OUR SHIPS MISSING THE CONVOYS
seeing that the transportation rider
is included in the articles.
WAR SHIPPING ADMINISTRA liON,
In other ^o«*ds, the entire tactic
WASHINGTON
is one of hustling the men into
articles before they, or their union,
June 9, 1943
'
has a chance of safeguarding their Mr. John Hawk, Secretary-Treasurer
rights and conditions.
We can tell Mr. Wyckoff anc Seafarers International Union of North America 'i f ,
'
'
. 1
Mr. Macauley that the question of Two Stones'Street
.
BV
the efficiency of the crew is not de­ New York City
termined by whether the articles
are coastwise or deep sea, but by Dear Mr. Hawk:
how their rights are respected. If
The War Shipping Administration has been advised that the off­
they arc kicked around by a bunch
of RMO punks, chiseled on condi­ shore operation of newly-commissioned vessels has been delayed and
tions and wages, treated like slave impaired from time to time to the extent that convoys have been missed,
labor, then there will be trouble.
by the continuance of a peacetime working habit of seamen employed
No one can deny that there have in the coastwise operation of such vessels.
been instances of maritime ineffi­
1. The delay is occasioned by seamen who join a newly-commis-i
ciency on the Atlantic &amp; Gulf
Coast. But these cases are trace­ sioned ship at port of delivery, i.e., Wilmington, North Carolina, and
able, almost 100% of the time, to work the vessel under coastwise articles t&lt;\ i loading port, i.e.. New
WSA-RMO red tape and bungling, York, New York, etc. Seamen pay off at the time the Shipping Com­
or to outright shipowner provoca­ missioner arrives to sign the crew on offshore articles and leave the ves­
tion of union men.
Macauley's plan of forcing deep sel. As a consequence, the movement of the vessel to the convoy rendez­
sea articles on men in the port of vous is delayed pending the availability and arrival of replacements. The
delivery is not going to correct any seamen who have paid off on coastwise articles return to sliipyards and
such inefficiency. It will only ag- sign coastwise articles on another newly-commissioned vessel, etc.
grivate the situation by demoral­
2. The efficiency is impaired by the practice of such seamen leav­
izing the very group so necessary
to the industry—the old time rated ing the vessel at the loading port. The seamen who leave the vesels atmen.
the loading port do not instruct the replacements on the peculiarities
Macauley's letter is full of vague of the mechanisms of the newly-commissioned ship. Obviously the re­
jeneralities concerning the alleged placements, particularly during the initial phase of the offshore opera­
jroblem. We say once again, let
lim bring into the open any case tion, cannot match the efficiency of the crew which has worked the Ves­
of a SIU ship delayed because of sel from the shipyard.
coastwise articles from port of deThe War Shipping Administration recognizes the fact that the
ivery. If he has such a case, let &gt;rafCtice of such seamen leaving the newly-commissioned vessel at the
him put it on the table so it can
3e examined and the real causes of oading port is legal. However, In view of the delays in sailing sched­
ules, and impairment of efficiency, this Adniinistration cannot look with
delay and inefficiency exposed.
favor on tl» continuance of the practice.
Therefore, the War Shipping Administration requests officials of
all maritime unions manning newly-commissioned vessels to use their
good offices to induce seamen to sign offshore articles and work the ves­
J. McLEON: Four hours due
from
Mississippi Shipping Com­ sel for the duration of the voyage. The War Shipping Administration
pany.
deems it vital that the unions and the seatiien act on this request iimneT. RAYMOND: $42.50 coming diately in the interests of the war effort.

•-I

006 trainees at the maritime train­
ing
schools at that time. Can it
WSA'RMO Conference:
possibly
be that the reason that
The RMO held a conference
rSthey
notified
the representative of
here on Thursday, June 17, con­
the
SUP
and
SIU in New York,
vened at 9:30 A.M. and wound up
B
was
so
that
they
could use the men
at 5.00 P.M. The 'agenda consisted
as
the
ones
that
they have placed
of the following: 1. Manpower re­
in
jobs,
and
are
part
of the figures
quirements; 2. Upgrrading; 3.
submitted
by
Mr.
M.
Dimock? I
Manning procedures; 4. Selective
wonder.
service.
The RMO's latest move is to
The WSA has opened schools for
the upgrading of officers, Ordinary move in on all the rivers, bays,
Seamen and Stewards department. lakes, and sounds. They have agreed from the S.S. Tarleton Brown.
Sincerely yours,
Courses are now open at San Fran­ to supply manpower to all the H, A. STRAUS: Overtime com­
cisco, Portland, Ore., Seattle, Los companies that operate tubs in ing. Sec Coffin, New York Branch.
EDWARD MACAULEY
Angeles, New Orleans, Baltimore these waters, and it certainly looks
Deputy Administrator
as though they are going whole Oilers on last trip of S.S. Del
and New York.
Coure time for Ordinary Seamen hog or nothing, and are even try­ Norte have overtime coming. Col­
THIS LETTER WAS DUL
LV CONSII
CONSIDERED BY THE MEMBERnot to exceed 30 days; Stewards ing to push the Maritime Training lect from Mississippi Line, 17 Bat­ SHIP ON THE NIGHT OF JUNE 21—/
-AND WAS THEN FILED IN
tery Place, New York City.
^department course time 2 to 6 Service out of the picture. Let's
THE
WASTEBASKET.
weeks. Any member who attends not kid ourselves that they are do­ Firemen on S.S. Richard Alvey
these courses will be paid by cither ing this towards the war effort. It have, overtime coming. Collect Bull
the RMO or the Maritime Train­ looks to me as though their pro­ Line, New York City.
ing Service. Just why they have gram closely follows the line that Crew S.S. iFrancis Marion have
two divisions of one government Hitler and Mussoline used against attack bonus due. Collect Robin
agency to handle this program was the workers in their countries. Are Line, New York City.
we starting on the way for a fa- Firemen and Ordinaries on S.S.
not answered.
The conference was a general re­ cist state here? Is the maritime in­ Livingstone have overtime due. See
hashing of the other conference dustry being used as the way for a Coffin, New York Branch.
that was held by the RMO, and it facist state here? Is the maritime
Crew S.S. John Stevena and S.S.
looked to me as though the confer­ industry being used as the guinea Pan Gulf have attack bonus' com­
The boys are beefing about the Liberty ships again and rightfully
ence was called by the RMO for pig for this experiment?
sa
They
say if they could get two^ more knots put of those tubs «
ing. Collect Waterman Line, 19
the purpose of blowing .heir horn,
Rector St., New' York City.
great many of the ships would be saved and none of the crew lost.
and to further, their jurisdiction in Selective Service:
Crew of S.S. Benj. Harrison who Recently a Bull ship was lost when she was missed by two torpedoes
the Maritime Industry. Advise all
The RMO reported that to date were forced to work on U.S.A.T.
the agents to send into their re- they have received 69,244 forms Shawne, report class of work to and the third caught her in the engine room and 12 brothers were lost.
apective headquarters every month 47, and 54,656 seamen requests for New York Agent.
On another Liberty ship Joe Wagner was Bosun and had two AB's with
a complete list of all men that have draft deferments. The RhlO filed
Crew of S.S. West Gatomsky him who had experience, and the rest aboard the tub we're Maritime
been assigned to the union by the 47,504 requests for seamens de­ have Russian Bonus due. Collect at trainees. The Naval Intelligence comes aboard and pulls Joe, off for
RMO. In this manner we can ferments, and about 150 requests Amtorg Trading Company, 210 Ma­
questioning. They later claim its a case of mistaken identity. Who is
check and see if they are Sunday- for deferments have been turned dison Ave., New York City.
sabotaging
the War effort now?
ing up on their figures regarding down by local selective service
..fc.Jnca- assigned to the Union. My boards. *
that they supply, but from . the
Attention All Agents
opinion is that these figures are not
Have been receiving quite a few evidence supplied by the RMO,
In Memory of
on the level.
complaints from our agents that even if the men do fill out their
'Brother
:
Some time ago Oalg Vincent, some local boards are demanding cards, they get no guarantee that
Beginning with this issue the
VSA representative of the port of that the union comply with the they are going to be defered. The Robert Hegeman, Oiler Seafarers Log will be published
New York, advised the union that War Manpower Commission direc­ RMO can do no more than the
weekly. In line •with the decisions
1899 - 1943
there was a shortage of Ordinary tive, and that the men must fill Unions in getting the men defered,
of the Agents' Conference, a week­
Died in New York City
; ' " Seamen, Wipers, and-Messmen, and out the forms supplied by the if they run' across a tough draft
ly news story will be expected
June 4,. 1943
w
that the RMO would OK any ap­ RMO.
board. Regardless of what kind of
from each port. These stories must
plicant that the Union would send
It certainly seems to me as work they are doing, they are go­
be in New York on Monday of
over there for a certificate. Of though the RJMO
pressure ing to be drafted into the armed Remember — Don't Sign each week. Spot news copy may
...is using
-.
course there were only about 20,- to get the unions to use the forms' forces.
WSA-RMD Fink Cards arrive on Tuesday.

I]

{Continued from Page 3)

MONEY DUE

Out of the Focs^l

c&gt;

by

jl. X..

u

T .-Ai

&lt;^4

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MACAULEY WOULD MUSCLE MEN INTO FINAL ARTICLES AT DELIVERY PORT&#13;
DEADLINE FOR F.D.R ACTION ON FASCIST SMITH-CONNALLY BILL&#13;
MOGAN PROMINENT IN BOSTON TRIBUTE TO MERCHANTMEN&#13;
TEXT OF SIU LETTER TO FDR ON CONNALLY BILL&#13;
JOHN LEWIS THANKS SIU FOR SUPPORTING MINERS' RETURN TO FEDERATION&#13;
HIGHLIGHTS OF ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION AT AGENTS CONFERENCE&#13;
ATTENTION ALL AGENTS</text>
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                    <text>.-J.-:- r

A

Wg:&lt; ^

]

-•• '"f-i

5AKBRS Jocf
OFFICIAL GROAN OF TOE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
.SEAFARERS' INTERNAWONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
V.

NEW YORK^

CTKIDAY, JULY 2, 1943

No; i4

Passes Fascist Labor Bill
House Committee Studies Job
Insurance For Merchant Men

The fascist Smith-Connally bill is ndw the law of the
land, having been overwhelmingly passed by both houses
of Congress over a Presidential veto last week end. But this
is not the end, for labor will continue to battle the repres=
sive measures by all available weapons. William Green,

President of the AFL, warned Con-^
gress that labor would "rebel momentary confusion and defec­
against it" in event the bill was tions in the ranks, but the entire
history of the American labor
J "Washington, D. C.—The House sub-committee on merchant marine and fisheries passed—and rebel we will.
movement
is such that one thing
is conducting hearings on unemployment insurance benefits for merchant seamen. Hear­ The legislation won't work—^it
is
certain,
the reactionary labor
can't work as long as there exists
ings started Thursday, continued on Friday and will be held again next Monday.
haters in Congress and their capit­
ill this country free and democrat­
There are two proposed drafts; Committee draft No. 1 was drafted by Mr; Murray ic unions. It may succeed in har­ alist masters are due for a lacing.
"The effect of the bill," declar­
Lattimer of the Railroad Retirement Board at the request of the Social Security Board, assing union leaders, in creating ed N. Y. State Federation Presi­
and will here after in this report
dent Thomas A. Murray, "is to.
be known as No. 1. Committee benefits payable to the seamen un­
impose involuntary servitude on
draft No. 3 was drafted by Dr. der that draft were not as liberal
the American workers."
Gray of the N. Y. State Unem­ as draft No. 1.
This the workers will not accept
ployment Commission at the re­
lying down.
Committee bearing on theie
quest of the IJf^ar Shipping Admin­
Collective bargaining will be
bills ended this week with no
istration, and will here after in
impaired, union men will have to
prospect of either measure be­
this report be known as No. 3. Dr.
operate in the shadow of prosecu­
ing submitted to the House at
Gray had previously submitted^ an­
tion, employers will double their
this session.
other draft, committee print No;
anti-union provocations, but the
2, he made some changes and later
Mr. Gregory Harris, represent­
workers will fight back and defend
submitted committee print No. 3. ing the Pacific American S.S. own­
their way of life—make no mis­
J-, r."" '•'a.
Mr.. Johnson, the representative ers association, stated that they
•'4,e peub, -y b, ,,
take about that.
V. a.
of the Lakes Carriers Association, were in favor of No. 3, they also
We have been told that the bill
who represents the'largest group of opposed the union hiring hall clause
was
aimed at John L. Lewis and
"O/,
•V. •
'O ,
steamship employers in the United in that draft. They also were
5"^
the members of the United Mine
States, stated that they were in fa­ favor of the rest of the draft* be­
W&lt;vkers of America. This is true
vor of No. 3 but opposed, -the cause the benefits._.payable. under
an-.so far as the-miner: have been
union hiring hall clauses. The rea^ No. 3 were not as liberal as No. 1.
in the vanguard of labor's fight
son that they were in favor of the He also challenged the legal right
for justice and the bosses hoped
{Continued on Page })
rest of the draft was because the
that by smashing the miners they
could smash all labor.
- But even if the miners hadn't
been forced out on strike by the
coal operators, even the auto and
rubber workers and the machinists
and the teamsters and the seamen
NEW YORK — Union officials endorsed!
NORFOLK—"Red Lea,d" Anderson, notorious. Wat­
had passively retreated before each
new boss offensive, the Smith-Con­
completely the request of WSA Administrator
erman Line Bucko skipper and log book expert, arrived in
nally
bill would still have passed
[Edward
Macauley
last
week
that
seamen
takNorfolk three weeks ago with the usual cargo of beefs, a
the
Congress
in some form. For
ling newly coiumissioiicd .veswell-filled log book and a stack of charges against th^ crew.
turn
to
shipyards
and
sign
coasl-f
the
goal
of
these
gentlemen is the
[seh out of the shipyard to wise articles on another newly,
On the other side of the picture, however, were a set of
complete
smashing
of the unions
[loading poiis remain on the commissioned vessel, etc.
charges and specifications fiW
for
all
time.
[ships for the first offshore 2. The efficiency is impaired by j
the practice of such seamen leav-J
It is a finish fight
and no con­
the crew agamst Red Lead.
ge„ i„ ^Red Lead's" quarters.
[ operation.
ing the vessel at the loading pory
Two logs against ordinaries for
cessions
by
labor
(short
of com­
Tlie
seamen
who
leave
the
Macauley urged that
Let this be an object lesson. Skip­
at the loading port do not
failing to respond promptly to the
plete dissolution) -will appease
Isign
oM-sl)ore
articles
to
prevent
the rcplacemejj
call of the whistle were upheld in pers are subject to rules the same
I delay caused by the signing , on of ities of the i
these gentlemen.
as
unlicensed
men.
When
they
vio­
I replacements and to maintain the ly-commissij
an inspectors hearing and "Red
What is to be done? Smith and
I complete efficiency of the vessel. the repli
Lead" smiled happily. His charges late these rules make then answer
Connaliy
and their henchmen
ing
the
I He pointed out, "Obviously the re- opqr
of inefficiency against the 2nd. to the proper authorities and stick
must be removed from office.
j
placements,
particularly
during
the
Mate were then dismissed and the around until the case is prepared.
• initial phase of the offshore ope
Henceforth labor must see that
jtion, cannot ^tch
smile faded.' "Then came the rev-, The crew stayed long enough in'
Congressmen wear the union. label.
I of the crew yr.hich
olution" and "Red Lead" himself this case to accomplish the desired
No finks in the plants and- on
I vessel from the slj
result.
w,is on the' carpet being crossthe
ships—no finks in Congress!
Commcntinjf
They failed in another obliga­
examined by Marty Trainor, Nor­
Itional Seci
•Smith stated;
tion to themselves and their union
folk Agent.
|in
this comi
. "You - can't dp this to me—ay brothers, however. The crew was
receiv;
vont lisden to. no union agitators' largely composed of SUP members
fumed the indignant Bucko; "Ay apd permit men, plus a few SIU
As has been predicted by the
vent to, sea before the mast." Alas West Coast black gang book mem­
and alack,. however, he was forced bers. Protested overtime amounted
Seafarers Log many times, the War
to listen and to try and defend to over a thousand bucks. MUCH
Shipping Administration is now
This.reproduction of a PILOT article graphically shows how the
OF THIS OVERTIME y COULD
lobbying in Congress for an enor­
himself.
His ship sailed again and up to HAVE BEEN COLLECTED 'N.M.U. leaders 'slavishly bow before- each new- ukase handed down
mous increase in its appropriation.
by the W.S.A. Last week the 8.1.U.'denounced the W.S.A. demand
the last minute it looked as though HERE IN NORFOLK IF THE
The WSA. plans to use the rtioney
for deep-sea articles at port-of delivery, as a move to chisel the
"R^d Lead" had beat thg rap. He CLAIMENTS WOULD HAVE
to build ships—to be sure—but al­
signed on the new crew and his STUCK AROUND. Now they ' seamen out of conditions. But the rank and file seamen's rights and
so to continue and expand its fink
conditionsare not factors-lo influence the sell-out artists in the
smile had almost returned-when he are scattered -from hell to break­
training program. Undaunted by
N.M.U.
was called back to the inspector's fast and reluctantly Norfolk has
the fact that it can't place the
office, relieved of his license for a to forward-the, overtime claim, to­
men
already graduated from its
irrespective of the policies of "No-coffee-time" and his coterie,
period, of thirty, days and told to gether with this article to head­
schools,
the RMO is asking $72,the S.LU. will continue to fight the W.S.A. every time that outfit
quarters. STICK AROUND
000,000
for its training fund.
pack up and get gone.
attempts to chisel the seamen (and this is about every day in the
The ship sailed with full crew BROTHERS AND SETTLE
The
total
appropriation asked by
week).
ninety per-cent. book members and YOUR BEEFS IN THE PAY­
the WSA for the comiqg year is a
The law allows men who sign coastwise articles to sign off whop
skippered by, a new skipper. The OFF PORT. It relieves pressure
cool" 2 billion dollars. This- is a
Mate who had also been on charges on already overworked. headquar­ -the ship goes dfep sea. -^We will continue to demand that Maeauley
boost of almost 100% over last
observe the law.
v .
)-ears appropriation.
was exonerated but as a result of ters and makes things better for all.

by Matthew Dushane

Unionism—-N.M.U. Brand

"Red Lead" Anderson
Receives A Vacation
; &lt; i&gt;

V'-'
!'• T..

•\i^|

ShipsFrom Yard Stay
On For Offshore Trip

ALL ABO.OARD FOR
THE GRAVY TRAIN

..,&gt;•'•'•'J.

J

�THE SEAFARERS* LOG.

Page Two

and in the news reel, lo and beholdl
I saw no other than the NMU difr
patcher sending out three men toj
Once in a lifetime we hear of
some
ship and they were sent tOj
things that are worth repeating,
som£
ship
by plane. Also on thcuii
here's one; Ralph Piehet, OS, sailed
sweat
shirts
was the great and re^
on a convoy from up North and
nown N.M.U. emblem of whiclj
the ship was sunk. Time went by
they are very proud.
iand the man was given up as lost,
Boy that gave me a pain in ths
his wife notified and in time the
in quite a while and we are short Benjamin Bourne, and all the over­ were drunk on paying off, and one
^when I see that kind of ad­
check was sent out. On one eve­
of all rated men, having to get time was agreed on. But when the of those two was a S.I.U. member vertising. I see that kind of adning that the favorite indoor sport
mes: from all over the Now Eng­ pay-off got under way the black who joined her at Bombay and the has got to get their own members
in England was standing by the
gang were short from 6 to 15 hours other fellow said he was going to to advertise and solicit members in
radio listening to the German land area.
apiece,
and when we took this up get a book in the S.I.U. as soon as that manner, right then and there
JOHN MOGAN, Agent
squawks go off the air, the sup­
with the skipper, low and behold he was able.
I would never join that outfit. Oh,
posedly dead Bro. Piehet was heard
I went aboard this ship, the first well, we will still continue as we
if
the
First,
Second
and
the
Chief
SAVANNA
broadcasting over the air from a
hadn't gone ashore. However, we N.M.U. ship I was ever aboard, to have alwayr been doing and in the
German prison camp, asking that
help olit the S.I.U. man in settling end we will have accomplished
Shipping in the Savannah dis­ were able to straighten out the big­
tf anyone heard him/to please no­
his beefs and did manage to get in more than they can ever realize
gest
part
of
it
because
it
was
over­
tify his wife and babies of his trict has greatly increased in the time that had been worked after a few good words before the N.M.
or can compete with. Namely, bet­
whereabouts. A bombardier in a last couple of months. Even had a the ship had arrived in this Port, N. Patrolman got wise to me and
ter contracts, wages, living condi­
Flying Fortress heard the report couple of ships come in here and but still we had to relay part of it had me chased ashore by the Coast
tions
and working" conditions.
and because he too was from the pay off. Had the S.S, Delaires of to Hawk in New York. But had Guard. The old man held the men
Two
or three days ago I got H
crescent city, in the next letter to the Mississippi Co., and S.S. James an official of the company been three days before paying them off
very
great
surprise when I was at­
his mother he told her and she call­ Hoban of Waterman Steamship present at the time of the pay-off without giving them the three days
tending
the
Agents Conference in
ed to bring the good news in person. Co., with quite a few hours of I believe that all the overtime pay.
New
York.
A few days ago Bro,
Upon arrival she found that wel­ overtime in dispute but every thing would have been squared away.
Steady as she goes and let us Blinkie Roberts took a jeffi om onq
come as she was, that the news had was settled satisfactorily to every
As I write this I have just been hope for a time when we can get of the South Atlantic S.S. Co.*i
preceded her. Mrs. C. Danils of 70 one concerned.
informed
by the Brothers of James these N.M.U. boys on a real Union ships and I was not expecting tqi
Shipping for the future looks
Rains' Av., "Worksop, Notts, Eng.,
Hager
that
he passed away June ship and show them how a real see him for at least thre or fouT
had heard the news broadcast and very promising but at the present 28, 1943. Brother Hager was Union is in operation.
months at the earliest. But by]
had immediately written to Mrs. time I have nobody on the beach. known to many a Philadelphian as
George,
I saw something that look­
EMILIO
DI
PIETRO,
Am still looking for all kinds of
Piehet.
"Slack-Away-Red" and I am sure
ed
like
an Admiral coming down
Patrolman.
For the information of you salt rated men.
that his passing will be a shock to
Piatt
St.
and who do you think ii:
It should also be brought to the
water birds, Worksop is in the coal
his many friends sailing out ot this
was—^none
other than Mr. RobcrtI
After the last war was over our
mining section. (I know because I attention of these young fellows
Port.
who
left
as
a fireman and canui
fighting men, composed mostly of
was privilaged to read the letter) that arc coming from the Mari­
The terrible Greek (George abor, came back to this country back as an Admiral with enough
and the Lady who &lt;lid the writing time Schools and shipping out on Karpetos) is still in dry-dock here
gold on him to sink a barge. Tltj
stated that she is a coal miners our contract ships, that they do and I believe he is getting ready to only to find it in the hands of gals have almost got- his lead pen­
wife. Further, for you salty guys, not have to report back to the Re­ ship again as it was overheard by racketeers, gangsters, and their
cil worn out from taking telephone
I bcleive that this is one of the cruiting and Manning Organiza­ Hodge that he stated to another 3olitical stooges. TTiese stooges numbers.
sure fire proofs of the solidarity tion to ship out, that thfey can re­ member, "Let me take a look at )assed laws at the command of
Well, that's all from this port.
existing btween the workers of the port to any Union Hall along the her and I will tell you whether I these cut throats. Later, scandals I hope to have some interesting;
of teapot domes and such began
world that has come to my atten­ coast to ship out, and ship almost
to come to light. An aroused news for nexf week.
any time they check on the ship- want to make her or not."
tion during this squabble.
"Well,
today
being
Monday
there
D. L. PARKER, Agent.
A further evidence of solidarity: {wng list. Also some of our book isn't much doing around the old public, in which labor played no
One morning upon entering the members are reporting to the Re­ Port but we have been informed mean part, began the twenty year
NORFOLK:
hall I am met by the query, cruiting and Manning Organiza­ by the powers to be that they ex­ war to. get the country back into
the
people's
hands.
About
as
much
"Where are your old clothes?" Up­ tion to be shipped out. These pect a slew of ships in here soon.
Plenty of men come and go in
on a little checking I find that the members should discontinue this Well, their isn't much more news, jlood was shed in the course of
Norfolk
but damn few stick
this
twenty
years
as
there
was
by
practice
immediately
as
there
are
local U.S.S. has inserted an article
so until next time, steady as she our boys over there. Apparently around more than two or three
enough
jobs
for
all
Union
members
in the local press asking the kind
goes.
days—^principally because _of the
history is about to repeat itself.
citizens to donate light weight old in all Union Halls along the coast.
HARRY J. COLLINS,
Our benevolent politicians at high price of pork chops and over­
Steady as she goes,
clothes to wear while the officials
Agent "W"ashington have recently passed crowded conditions. The beer joints
of the U.S.S. are attending banCHARLES WAID,
the anti-strike bill. A coincident is close at eleven P.M. and they arc
iquets, etc., asking for more old
Agent
that Hitler and the "ILL DUCK" generally sold out long before that.
clothes, so they can attend more
BALTIMORE
passed just such laws immediately In addition, any eating or drinking
hanq
say who the hell started
PHILADELPHIA
place is generally packed five deep.
this merry-go-roimd. Maybe they
The S.S. City of Dalharc is own­ after they took power. We won­
Shipping is good with a betteif
der who or whom are planning to
still don't remember that the
Well, here we go doing business ed by the U. S. Lines which has an
selection
of ships than almost any
Unions stated at the inception of at the same old place again. Broth­ agreement with the famous N.M.U. take our country over again. The
other
Port.
Anyone that want
voters
left
in
this
country
should
this organized charity racket that er Gillis has severed his relations This ship just came back front a
any
kind
of
job
from a two-stackef
make
it
their
duty
to
see
that
every
we have been and still are able to with the United Seaman's Service. 115.-2 months trip. They were in
on
down
to
a
towboat
can get it
politician
is
ousted
that
.voted
for
take care of our own.
He was formerly connected with port .three days before a patrolman that vitdous bill. Do this before it here. In Port now ,and calling fta
In line with this, I made a trip that organization as Chief Sanitary even went down to the ship and
over to Camp Kittiwake last Sun­ Engineer. He states that his rea­ when he got there all he asked for is too late. For you may not have crews, are the usual half dozen Lib­
day as quite a number of stories sons for qutting were that he was to see the men's books and the opportunity to do so if they erties, and a couple of C-2's. Ilii
were being spread about this set­ wanted to get back to the line of when each delegate showed their are re-elected. Also, they should the last week over seventy m,rt
have been shipped from the hatt
up. The only trouble I could find production.
reports to him, he said that all demand the law be repealed.
although
a good percentage were
It is labor's duty to defend the
after talking to our mmbers (ex­
We have a brand new situation books will have to be paid up be­ gains of labor. Most of our brave trip-card and Maritime Commis­
cepting the usual squawks wUch here in this port, when a ship fore the men could leave the ship.
any sailor has) was that they could comes in from a foreign trip the When they showed him all the fighters whom are now at the va­ sion trainees.
There is ninety miles of water­
not find Logs even though there Captain and the purser take all the beefs, he just looked them over rious battlefields would want it this
front
to cover here. Try and cover
was an abundance of Pilots around. records of the pay, over time draws and said he cotild not do anything way. Certainly they would not
a
ship
at New Port News and an­
hke
to
return
home
and
find
that
More on this later. Outside of this, and what have you, to their New about them because "we are at
other
at
Berkley the same day anA
everything
they
fought
for
was
in
Fm thinking of getting torpedoed York office and the next day they war."
you
will
work until midnight, yet:
vain,
and
certainly
they
also
would
(Royal St.) just to get out there
The Captain had the crew work­
bring back a payroll that was made
it
often
has
to be done. TTiis port
like to come home and return to
for a while, it is the berries.
up in the companies office and pro­ ing ten hours a day from Bombay civil life to a job that had the same wants a special box in the Log in­
' ARMY, Agent ceed to pay the crew off. Where to Baltimore, 2 hours as emergency
or better conditions and pay as be­ structing all crews coming into
the rub comes the company officials lookout in addition to their regu­ fore they left. This is really what Hampton Roads ANYWHERE toj
BOSTON
in New York have cut a few hours lar eight hour, trick, using the they are fighting for—7 economic call the hall at once. If ships are
from their overtime, but nobody "safety of the ship" gag. But the security. So voters make it your missed here it ie because, no one a^
Has been some time since Boston seems to know just what overtime gun crew only sto^ two hours out business to see that they get it.
the hall is notified and the hall is
had anything in the Log, but the company has cut, or just what of every twelve as lookout, as they
open from eight to five every day
JOSEPH FLANAGAN,
brother, the reason is that nothing for. All that the members know always do.
except Sunday, or unless both the
Agent Agent and Patrolman have to bo
The N.M.U. claims to be a nice
has happened until lately.
is that the total amount of his
But now with all the shipjMng overtime does not jibe, and to fur­ Union to be a member of, but if
busy paying off or signing on dif­
and dispatching going on, we in ther make things more complicat­ that is the way they treat their
TAMPA
ferent ships.
Boston are having our hands full, ed there is no official from the members, they .would be wise to
_The Fairisle came in with a lofi
especially with a few members get­ company's office in New York have that Captain get a crew from
Things around this port are of collectable overtime plus the
the S.I.U. on that ship so he could about as dead as a las; year's bird usual beefs found on "Red Lead"
ting drunk and missing watches, present at the payoff.
also refusing to obey the orders of
When the agent confronts the be put in his place and get ac­ nest. We are getting quite a few Andersen's ships. But the question
the Officers of the ships. We all Captain with the short overtime he quainted with a real Union crew. of the Tampa boys here that have is: How in the hell can the beefs
know that they think they are is told that if the man in question There wasn't a beef settled in fa­ been gone six months or more, and be. settled and the overtime collect­
Little Tin Gods and all that, but has any overtime coming to him vor of the members of the crew of from what they tell me they had ed when the crew dumps every­
with the C. G, on your tails, do he can go to New York and settle that ship, the Company winning quite a bit of experience in various thing in the Agent's lap and thefi
what they tell you and take it up it with the Port Captain. Pretty all of them.
parts of the world.
never shows up again.
Now I know why the N.M.U.
later in Po^. When paying off in cute I calls it. Of course, as I see
Bro. Marvin Swint has been "tell­
If anyone wants to ship and se­
the past few weeks there has been it a Patrolman or an Agent can al­ has so many ships, they have noth­ ing us some wierd tales of his ex­ lect the kind of ship he wants, this
quite a few of the members with 6 ways get to the Captain before he ing but South St^, and So. Broad­ perience. There is one thing that is the place—AND DON'T FOR­
nionr:hs probation put on them, takes the payroll to New York to way bums similar to No Coffee Joe I can say, our members are not so GET TO CALL THE HATT'
also a few with the seamen's papers have it made up and see if the over­ when he shipped out last from the publicity minded as the N.M.U. WHEN YOUR SHIP HITS THIS
time is all in order. This has been old I.S.U. Hall, The entire crew, Commrats.
Invoked.
PORT.
^
Shipping and business is the best done on one ship in particular, the with the exception of two men,
I attended a show the other day
MARTY TRAINOR, Ageni

NEW ORLEANS

WHArS DOIwG

Around the Ports

!

Ps:

P;^i.

II

•J.'•I V

Friday^ July 2, 1945

y

':-,y

�BBB
THE

SEAFARERS' LOG

Page Three

House Committee Studies Job
SEAFARERS
LOG
Insurance For Merchant Men
Published by the

(Con/inueJ from Page 1)
of the XJiliOu hiruig hall 'bciug uScd
by the government as an employ­
ment agency for seamen being en­
titled to any unemployment bene­
fits.
Mr. Callahan of the Maritime
exchange in New York, an employ­
er organization, also went down
the line with the employers, and
had the same argument.
All the employers' representa"tives that have attended this hear­
ing so far, and who have testified,
are all in favor of No. 3, but are
all opposed to the hiring hall clause.
They have contended that under
No. 1 the seamen would be en­
titled to too many benefits, and
that it is a steal of funds that the
^ployer is contributing. From
the general gist of their testimony
it seems that they are all in favor
of unemployment insurance, but
they do not want the seamen to
receive any benefits, or at least un­
less they are company stooges.
Regarding the hiring hall I have
tubmitted the following.statement:
"Wo are in favor of unem­
ployment Insurance. However,
we feel that the Union Hiring
Hall is our greatest protection
against unemployment, and we
feel that any unemployment in­
surance scheme that interferes
with the Union in maintaining
their hiring hall is unsatisfac­
tory. We would rather not
have any unemployment insur­
ance if, in order to secure any
unemployment benefits, our
members would have to lose the
protection they now enjoy un' dec the Union hiring hall."

documented under U. 8. Mari­
time laws, and spersts offshore,
coastwise, intercostal. Great
Lakes, rivers, bays, and sounds,'
be included in any unemploy­
ment insurance bill that may
be submitted to Congress, pro­
vided they are not covered by
any State unemployment com­
pensation act."
Under No. 3, the Great Lakes
are covered, but only during the
season. I also contended that the
men need the benefits after the sea­
son closes, as during the season
they would all be working and
would not be in nwd of any bene­
fits as bad as they would need them
when they are not working.

addition to that, after liis suspen­
sion, he would be required to ac
cumulate another 140 working
days before he would be eligible to
any benefits.
My statement on the disqualifi­
cations:
"We are opposed to any bill
that is encumbered by disquali- ^
fications, and recommend that
the employment practices of
the industry be given consid­
eration and that when ever
Ships Articles terminate, em­
ployes who do not re-sign ar­
ticles for another voyage, are
to be considered quajified for
benefits after the usual two
weeks waiting period."

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

HARRY t-UNOEBERC

------ President

110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HA-V^K

------- Secy-Treas.

p. O. Box 25, Station D., New York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE

-

-

- "Washington Rpp.

424 5th Street, N. "W., Washington, D. C.

Directory of Branches
BRANCH
NEW YORK

PHONE
ADDRESS
2 Stone St.
Diapatcher'e Office
BOwIiing Green 0-3430
Aaent
BOwlina Green S-M37
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
14 North Gay St.
Calvert 4539
6 North 6th St
Lombard 7651
25 Commercial PL
Norfolk 4-1083
309 Chartras St.
Canal 3336
215 East Bay St.
Savannah 3-1728
..423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
S8 So. Concaptlon St.#... Dial 2-1392
45 Ponce de Leon
Puerto de Tlerra
219 20tfa Street
Galveston 3-8043
2021 S. Federal Highvray. .Ft. Lauderdale 1601

Under No. 3, any seamen who
BOSTON
makes a trip and his articles ter­
BALTIMORE
PHILADELPHIA
minate, and is offered employment
NORFOLK
NEW ORLEANS
or an opportunity to re-sign on
SAVANNAH
TAMPA
for another voyage and refuses to
^nnn g
re-sign on would not be entitlec
PUERTO RICO
GALVESTON
to any benefits.
FT. LAUDERDALE
Under No. 1, after the complet­
Under No. 3, the River boat­
ion of a voyage, or a man quits
men would be out entirely. In the
vessel, he would have a two weeks
PUBLICATION OFFICE:
majority of cases the States do not waiting period before he would be
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
cover them, and they would be the
entitled to benefits. All unem­
New
York
City
BOwling Green 9-8346
forgotten men under this bill.
ployment insurance laws have
Under No. 1, they are covered two week waiting period before
if they are on a scow ten net tons any claiment would be eligible to
or over, and all river boats that benefits.
CIO Longshoresmen. on the Pacific would be entitled to benefits if hi*
hire men on them are ten net tons
Under No. 3, a claiment woulc Coast, the NMU would not be en­ union or any other union is out
or over. The men that Brother have to work 140 days before he titled to any benefits, but the SIU on strike. The employers blew?
Biggs has in the SIU on the Miss­ would be entitled to any benefits, &amp; SUP members would be entitled their top on this part of the bilL
issippi River are covered by tliis Only one State of the 48 States to benefits because the union on
Under No. 3, before any claim­
bill.
that have unemplo)rment insurance strike is CIO. The Pacific Coast ent would be entitled to any bene­
Under No. 3, the employer have such a qualifacation, and that Marine Firemens, Oilers, Water- fits, the employer must be notified
tenders, and Wipes Union, would in. writing that the seamen wh(»a
would be compelled to contribute State is Ohio.
3 per cent to the fund, and the
Under No. 1, the time requirec be entitled to benefits regardless he had employed requested unem­
employe would be compelled to before any claiment would be elig­ of whether the AFL or CIO were ployment benefits. This means that
contribute 1 per cent to the fund. ible for unemployment benefits is on strike, because they are not af­ all kinds of loop holes would bo:
filiated with any national union, encountered by a seaman seeking
Under No. I, the employer 90 days.
Under No. 3 the union hiring would be compelled to contribute
This is one of the reasons that and are independent.
benefits. The employer certainly^
hall is, guaranteed. On page No. 3 per cent, and the employee the employers are against No. 1, it This proposal encourages unions would be in a position of block­
50, 4th, 5th, 6th lines of No. 1, would not be required to make any requires a 90 days working period to remain independent, and 'not ing benefits to claiments that they
the following lines were deleted, contributions.
accumulated time, and they woulc affiffiate with any national organi­ would not care to see collect.
"EXCEPT INSO FAR AS ANY
I have submitted the following be eligible. Under No. 3, it is 140 zation, and discriminates against
Under No. 1, the employer
SUCH SYSTEM IS FOUND BY
days, hence the employers favor the AFL and the CIO.
statement;
would never know who has apphedi
TFIE BOARD TO INCREASE
No. 3.
"We are opposed to any con­
Under No. 1, a claiment would for benefits.
THE BENEFITS TO BE PAID
Under No. 3, any person who is
tribution
being
made
b^
the
not
be entitled to benefits due to
In comparing both there draftsi&gt;
UNDER THIS ACT." With these
in seasonal work, would oxily be
employe
towards
any
unem­
stoppage
of work because of a it can readily be seen the reason
words deleted from No. 1, the
eligible during the seai^on. This
ployment Insurance fu.nd, as it
Union hiring hall is also protect­
would mean that vessels on the strike in the establishment, prem­ that the employers favor No. 3
is
not
the
general
practice
un­
ed, and has no strings attached.
Lakes, and in the Alaska trade, ises, or enterprise at which he is because the employers and inde­
der
present
State
laws
of
the
Un(fcr No. 3, the only fishermen
claiments would only be eligible employed, provided, that this dis­ pendent union have all the advan­
qualification shall not apply after tages of the benefits, and it is nat­
48
states
that
have
unemploy­
that would be included are fisher­
during the season.
the end of the month beginning on ural that the employers favor a
ment
insurance
benefits.
Only
men who do not work on a share
My statement was as follows:
the day on which the board finds bill that encourages independent
4
States,
California,
New
Jer­
and share basis, and they would
"We are opposed to any bill
such
stoppages of work began.
sey,
Rhode
l^and,
and
Ala­
unions, as the employer womd have
only receive benefits during thie
wherein certain claiments
bama,
require
the
employes
to
After
thirty
days
the
claiment
an
easier time to knock them over.
fishing season.
would be classed as seasonal
contribute to the State unem­
That would eliminate all the
workers, thereby disqualifying
ployment insurance funds."
fishermen who are affiliated with
them, and they would not be
the SIU, as they all work on a share
entitled to any benefits."
Had a conference this past week with Captain Edward Macauley
The employers all beefed about
and share basis. It~~would also the contribution. They expressed
chairman of the board, and brought to his attention that the seamea
Under No. 1, there is no dis­
eliminate them from receiving any the fears that with the employes
in the last war had a better insurance policy than they have now.
qualification
for seasonal workers,
benefits after a fishing
season is not contributing they would in
Under Public Law No. 20-65 the Congress approved June 12^
closed. My contention is that the the near future be required to in­ any time they are out of work they 1917, seamen were entitled to some of the following benefits:
only time that a fisherman needs crease their contributions. The would be entitled to benefits.
"Section 3 (A) in case of death, permanent disability which
Under No. 3, any member of
benefits is after a season closes, as maritime employers are the only
prevents the person injured from performing any and every kind
any
organization
who
is
affiliated
during the fishing
season they employers who have not been con­
of duty pertaining to his occupation, or the loss of both hands, both
would not need any benefits as tributing to any unemployment with a national organization, and
arms, both feet, both legs, or both eyes, or any two parts thereof,
some
union
of
the
nationl
orgnithey would all be working.
fimds, all other employers have
for the payment of an amount equivalent to one years earnings of
zation is out on strike, thereby'
Under No. 1, all fislietnien who been contributing for the past causing the seamen to be locked
the insured, as fixed in the articles of the voyage (herein after rework on vessels of TEN NET eight years.
fered to as the principal sum), but in no case shall such amount be
out, they would not be entitled to
TONS or over and the vessel is
Under No. 3, any seaman-who any benefits.
more than $5,000 or less than $1,500."
documented under the U. S. mari­ had his certificate suspended by
Example — If the International
time laws, would be entitled to the Coast Guard would not be Longshofemens Association (AFL) 'resent Policy MWEB First Policy MWEB
Public Law 20, 1917.
benefits, and there are no seasonal eligible for any benefits until his or any other AFL union is out on
100% Life
100% life
100%' .
requirements attacted to it. They suspension period is complete. He strike and SIU or SUP (AFL) re­ Life
ioth
Hands,
or
both
would be entitled to benefits any would then have to accumulate the spect their picket line, or the SIU
time that they are out of work. All original time required (140 days) or SUP is locked out (Layed Off) Arms, or both legs,
fishermen affiliated with the SIU before he would be entitled to any we would not be entitled to any M)th feet, or both
ditto
eyes
100%
ditto
would be entitled to benefits un­ benefits.
benefits, because the union that is
65%
;
ditto
ditto
Arm
.
der No. 1.
Under this draft, a seaman who out on on strike is affiliated with
50%
ditto
ditto
I submitted the following state­ would have been to sea for 140 the AFL. However, the NMU dand
50%
40%
Foot
50%
Foot
oot
.
ment on the men we wanted cov­ days, and he may have taken a (CIO) would be entiteld to bene­
65%
65%
65%
Leg
..
ered:
few days off in some foreign port, fits because the union that is out
45%
lye ..
35% Eye
45% Eye .
"I have been instructed to
upon his return to the U.S. the on strike is AFL, and not affiliated
urge your committee that all
Coast Guard may suspend his cer­ with the CIO. The same would
Under th^ first policy issued by the board it will be noted that for
merchant seamen, fishermen,
tificate for TIF TEEN OR apply to a tinion that is affiliated these same percentages it was foot 50%, and eye 45%. It will also be
and river boat men, who are em^
THIRTY DAYS. He wohld not with the CIO, if a union was oui noted that through a Congressional act during the last war it was,
ployed on all American vessele
be entitled to any benefits, but in on strike was affiliated with the OSS of foot 50% and loss of an eye 45%.
Under No. 1, they would also
be included on the Great Lakes,
and there would be no seasonal re­
strictions attached to them when
the person would be entitled to
benefits. They would be eligable
any time the)' are out of work.

Maritime War Emergency Board:

Vt-M

• -J*."

A

�MONEY DUE Seafarers* Log-

Out of the Focsl
by

i-. X.
Mrs. Scaifc has been looking out for the welfare of the SIU boys,
inviting them to parties at the Cosmopolitan Club, and treating the
boys first rate. Everytime the boys come back from one of her parties,
t|iey tell of what a swell time they had. Our thanks to you, Mrs. Scaife
and keep up the good work. Mae Dillon at the Furuseth Club got some
piublicity by having taken good care of a British seaman's two children.
The boys at the SIU want to-say hello-to Mae, and tell her to keep up
t good work.

H

k'B''

f

W--

w
&amp;

ii- ^
I The following brothers are now sailing as licensed officers: R. Langford, Paul Jones, Leroy (Rah Rah) Parrish, Bill Edwards, Doug Muncaster and Vince Yakavonis. Joe Hart is studying for his 2nd Assistant's
ticket. Joe has become a Bcnidict and says he has reformed. We wish
him luck. Karl Johnson is going to New London for his 2nd Mate's
ticket.

Dusan (Chili) De Dusin, who was ashore for 18 months recover­
ing from an injury has finally sailed with his buddy Arthur Thompson
on an Alcoa ship. Mae Sclar has been seen at the Somerset having tea.
Red Brady and Mike Walsh made a trip on the same ship and were such
good boys that the Captain called them Gentlemen. Tish, Tish.

ib •

STEPHEN
MORGA^N,
KNUT
CATO, E. M. ALLAIN: You havo
two months, nino days difference in
Fireman and Watertender pay, and
one month, nine days bonus coming
from the Waterman Line.
*
e
e

I •,

i'Will Print Amendments
In Next Issue of Log

I.

PHILLIP POSSIN
See the Secretary-Treasurers' of­
fice next time you are in New
York.
'erne
RAY PUGH
See the Secretary-Treasurer's of­
fice next time you are in New York.

The amendments to the Atlan­
tic &amp; Gulf Constitution drafted by
the Agents Conference, will be
printed in the next issue of the
Log. They will be printed for the
purpose of general discussion. The
amendments will appear on the
next regular ballot for ratification
by the membership.

HONOR ROLL
CREW S.S. RICHARD H. LEE

Deck Department which made
lest voyage on S.S. George Gale
-has overtime coming from Mississ­
ippi Line.

*

*

*

*

*

Oilers on last trip of S.S. Del
Norte have overtime coming. Col­
lect from Mississippi Line, 17 Bat­
tery Place, New York City.

•* * »
em*

^Firemen on S.S. Richard Alvey
have overtime coming. Collect Bull
Line, New York City.

.

»

*

*

Crew S.S. -Francis Marion have
attack bonus due. Collect Robin
Line, New York City.
Firemen and Ordinaries on S.S.
Livingstone have overtime due. See
Goffin, New York Branch.
Crew S.S. John Stevens and S.S.
Pan Gulf have attack bonus com­
ing. Collect Waterman Line, 19
Rector SL, New York City.

CREW S.S. CHIPPEWA

19.00
r.

1J.0(^

;

12.6^

M MURR

10.00

H. PRICE

6.00

P. G. BUFORD

,

J.OO

A. ROMEJKO

5.00

X BOUT^I

,

5.00

H. L. NICHOLS
J. S. HART

« « «
J. McLEON: Four hours due
from
Mississippi Shipping Com­
pany,

« ' «

h.iio

CREW S. S. LAFAYETTE .......J. tf.OO;

Deck &amp; Engine Dept. S.S. Samuel
Griffin
having
personal
effects
claim see Robin Line claim agent,
39 Cortland St., N. Y. C.
Steward Dept, S.S. Broholt Liv­
ingston have overtime coming. Col­
lect Bull Line..

H. A. STRAUS: Overtime comng. See Goffin, New York Branch.

; 30^

CREW S.S. WALTER E. RANGER

SIMON WILLIARD

*

T. RAYMOND: f42^ coming
from the S.S. Tarleton Brown.

$78.00

CREW S.S. JAMES GUNN

Steward Dept. S.S. Fitzburgh Lee
have money due from Smith &amp;
Johnson, 80 Broad St.
e

see

#.

CREW S.S. FLOUR SPAR

Entire Deck Department of S.S.
Josiah Parker has overtime due.
Gollect Mississippi Steamship Com­
pany, New Orleans.

«

The oldest of the four Jernigan brothers was recently lost through
enemy action. Earl Brown, one of the best cooks in the SIU fleet, was
recently declared lost. The ship has been overdue 7 weeks and has been
officially declared lost. It is the first Liberty ship to lose an entire crew.
Earl was only married three weeks before he sailed on that ill-fated ship.
All his friends in Baltimore will sure miss him. We extend our sym­
pathy to both his wife and his family.

W

Friday, July 2, 1945

THE SEAFARERS* LOG

Page Four

4.5(1
:

J. ARSENAULT

^

4.0(^

,.

4.0(i

T. TETONIS
CREW S.S. JEAN
L. S. BUGAJEWSKI
A. C. JUtCHESS
E. ERIKSON
J. LYNN
!
J. W. PICON
....:.
FRANKIE
G. HEGMANN
C. M. RODRIQUES
B. G. MORANO
F. J. KEAVFENY
;
E. M. SCHIBICQUE
J. BLAKEY
M. WERCKSHAGEN
:
C. S. ALBERTSON
CRFW S.S. RAPHEAL SEMMES
S. BAN WORT
G. SCHMIDT
T. J. TIGHE

r 4.00
4.00
3.00
3.00
3.00
3.00
3.00
2.()0
2.0^
2.00
2JOO
2.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
2.0&gt;
l.OO
1.00
l.()0

...'

!
;
:
r.

$276.50

RA1.0. TRAINEE'S CONCEPTION OF A SHIP
U.S.5. &amp;ULL3M1P
c.acg HULL 1313^
;lr V V . -:

• •'
W'''''
KB-:..T;
•

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I ....

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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
CONGRESS PASSES FASCIST LABOR BILL&#13;
HOUSE COMMITTEEE STUDIES JOB INSURANCE FOR MERCHANT MEN&#13;
"RED LEAD" ANDERSON RECEVIES A VACATION&#13;
UNIONISM--N.M.U BRAND&#13;
ALL ABO-OARD FOR THE GRAVY TRAIN&#13;
R.M.O. TRAINEE'S CONCEPTION OF A SHIP</text>
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                    <text>OFFICIAL ORGAN OP THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
NEW YORK, N. Y., tKiDAY JULY 9, 1943

N.M.U. Stooges Sabotage
Officer Candidates'
Beefs On Prices
In the Pilot of May 14, a deceptive write-up was given
to the May 7 demonstration of the officer candidates against
the high prices in the school canteen at Fort Trumbull in
New London, Conn. Now confidentially, the Pilot boys
were on the negotiation committee to settle the beef. After

Crews' Health And Safety
Threatened By Treatment
Of German War Prisoners

Dutch Gains Won
one month, all the hot air eminThrough I.T.F.
ating from that rag about promis­ be formed on such a large rank and
ing "action" has disappeared. * The
Superintendent of the school has
ignored all protests about his prof­
iteering at the expense of the sea­
men, and (wirfi the aid of the
strike - breaking Stalinists) has
smothered all protests.
Since the 'Pilot failed to inform
the NMU members as to just what
their boys were dding on that
grievance committee, here is how
the story runs.
The boycott against the school
canteen was spontaneous and parti­
cipated in by bonified seamen. The
demonstrators went on record,
without a disseirtitig vote, to bby=
cott the canteen until the prices
came down. They then elected a
large committee to straighten out
their beef. As sooii as the terrible
word "strike" got around, the
Stalinist-NMU top - fraction went
into action and saw to it that their
stooges were elected on the com­
mittee. In order to be able to , show
the administration what bootlickers
..they arc, they had to first elim­
inate apy, opposition which might

file corhmittee. They did this by
successfully maneuvering the. for­
mation of a small super-committee
in which they were the key negoti­
ators. The negotiation was a typical
Joe Curran sell out. Thfcse servile
renegades did not have the guts
to call a general mass meeting to
hear the bOycotters-' opinions, but
instead went around informally
saying nothing could be done about
prices. These prices had been ar­
bitrarily established by the Supertendene of the school,' who alleg­
edly has rftoney invested in the
canteen.
After this type of negotiation
had proceeded for some time, sev­
eral people became inqusitive as to
the names of the boys on the su­
per-committee. The Daily Worker
stiffs were so aware of their das­
tardly betrayal that they, evaded
the question by talking about the
establi.shment of a permanent
house council so-that these .ugly
demdnstrations could be avoided in
the future.
{Continued on Page 4)

No. ly

Improvements in waiting pay
and living cost allowances have
been granted to the officers and
seamen of the Netherland merch­
ant marine who through no fault
of their own are unable to work
aboard ship and for whom no other
suitable work can be provided, the
American office of the Internation­
al Transport Workers' Federation
reports.
The new order just isued by the
Netherland Ministry of Social Af­
fairs and retroactive to January 1,
1943, applies to Dutch seafarers
ashore who have been registered in
the manning reserve for a continous period of at least three months.
All officers and ratings in that
category are entitled to free board
and lodging or, in lieu,.^thereof, to
weekly payments of £2.15.0 for
captains and officers and £2.0.0 for
ratings. Married officers receive an
additional £1.5.0 and men 17,4 .sh.
per -week, with 5 more sh. per week
for the first child and 2.6 sh. for
each child thereafter.
{Continued on Page 4)

Last week members of the crew of an SIU ship which
had been used in North Africa to transport Axis prisoners,
arrived in headquarters office and told an appalling story
of conditions aboard their ship.
To begin with, the prisoners were treated with the
utmost callousness by the' author­
ities and were loaded into the cargo
holds—400 to a hold! Having
stowed the prisoners away like so
much bauxite, the hatches were
then battened down. The prison­
ers were left in the black, air­
less holds without any provisions
for sanitation.
Such a situation endangers the
health and life of the civilian
crews who carry these prisoners.
Even defeated soldiers are apt to
riot under such conditions, and yet
very few armed guards were placed
over the prisoners. Had these Ger­
mans known the inadequacy of
the guarding force, the lives of the
merchant crew wouldn't have been
worth a plug nickle.
With . no sanitary facilities for
these men, the resultant mess and
danger to health is easy to imagine.
If this condition i.s not soon cor­
rected, American seamen as well as
Axis prisoners will needlessly sac­
rifice their lives.
Some very practical suggestions

were made by the crew members of
this ship, and we pass them along,
for the consideration of the oper­
ators and the WSA. Whether or
not these particular suggestions are
adopted, the SIU demands that
some reform be effected—and soon.
Here are the crew's proposals:
1. Put no more men in a hold;
than can be adequately bunked and,
fed.
2&lt; Havi each group of prisoners
select their own sanitary squads
who will be responsible for the
cleanliness of the holds.
3. Have running water fore and;
aft and have the prisoners wash,
down the deck twice a day.
' 4. After the prisoners have been,
unloaded, batten down the hatches
and open the steam smothering
lines to fumigate the holds.
We are of tlie opinion that these
suggestions are pretty good. May­
be the master minds in Washing­
ton will think of better ones. But
one thing is certain, the health of
the American merchant seamen de­
mands prompt action by ^he auth­
orities.

SEE END OF
LIBERTY TUBS

These SIU brothers held the spot light in. Jam-packed Constitution Hall in Washington, D. 0., on May 21 when AFL workers from
'.all over the country met for a victory rally. .Survivors of torpedoings, these brothers were presented to the audience and told briefly of
their record at sea.
Reading left to right:, Matthew Dushane, 8IU Washington representative; Unidentified brother; L. H. Cheatham; Walter Mass; Joe
Flanagan, Baltimore Agent; Captain John Mattson, MMP; William Gr^ePi President of American Federation of Labor; Harry Lundeberg, SIU President; Charks Reid; W. Green, and Lou WheatoiU-

1 "

•

,

..Kfciiilr'r.,' J-"-J.hi-.'/'i

Tlie men who sail the ships will
certainly welcome the news that
the swival chair artists in the Mar­
itime Commission have finally got­
ten around to replacing Liberty
ship construction with a new, fast­
er vessel which will be known as
the "Victory Ship." This doesn't
mean that the merchant seamen
won't have to continue to endan­
ger their lives on the Liberty rust
buckets already constructed, but
at least no more of these clay pigions will be coming off the ways.
The Victory ships will be equip­
ped with a turbin-gear power plant
qjf 6,000 horsepower and will ,ba
capable of making 17 knots. The
length of the ships will be 445 feet,
will have a 62 foot beam and three
decks. The ship will be an overall!
welded job, but will have rivetejl
plates in certain parts of the inter­
nal structure. The new ships will
carry roughly 1,000 tons more cargo than the Liberty. The new ships,
will also be more heavily armed.
Contracts for the construction
of 411 of these ship have already
been let, with mass production get­
ting under way this fall and deliv­
eries expected by the spring of next
year.

'm

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Page T^o

THE SEAFARERS' LOG

1•

Ji.
a.
1

fRePORT OI\
^ASHItVGTOIV

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

U
h

w-Zi'.

\^ m
m

m

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

HARRY LUNDERERG ------ President
lia Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

- -

- Secy-Treas.

P. O. Box 25, Station P., Hew York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Rep.
424 5th Street, N. W., Washington, O. C

Directory of Branches

I-&gt;

ADDRESS

RRANCH

PHONE

NEW YORK

£
vtiiDispatchar'a Offiea......., .BOwUing Green 8-34.30
. BOwling Green 9-3437
Asent.
.Liberty 4057
BOSTON
330 Atlantic Ave.
Calvert 4539
BALTIMORE
14 North Gay St.
Lombard 7651
PHILADELPHIA.......... North 6th St.
NORFOLK
25 Commercial Pl...^.... .Norfolk 4-1083
Canal 3S36
NEW ORLEANS
309 Chartrea SL
Saveuuiah 3-1728
SAVANNAH
JtlB East Bay St.
Tampa MM-1SS3
TAMPA
423 Ea«t Piatt St
MOBILE
55 So. CoDceptlon St..... Dial 2-1392
PUERTO RICO..........45 Ponce de Leos......, .Pnerta de Tien*
.Galveeton 2-8043
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway. .Ft. Lauderdale 1601

PUBLICATION OFFICE:
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York Gty
BOwUng Green 9-8346

It r-

i^F

t.V

Hn Wsmohiam
BOCHULSKY, STANISLAW.
BROWN, EARL L
BROWING, ROBERT F.
CHANDLER, CURTIS
FOUNTAIN, W. 0., Jr.
FUNK, LEONARD .. .
HARRIS, HARRY
HEUBNER, CARL
HUEBNER, HERMAN .....
HUTCHINSON, HERMAN
KARDOS, CHARLES
MUEHLE,ERICO
„
MURPHY, JOSEPH „
REA,JOHN A
REED, CLYDE, Jr
SALZMAN, CART. F.
SANCHEZ TITAN
SOBERBERG, EDGAR ...
SPIVEY, CLAYTON
STEPHENS, CHARLES
ITIOMAS. JOHN
!
THOMAS, THOMAS J
TOBIASSEN, TOBIAS
.
TURNER, LEMUEL
VON DOLTEREN, ANTHONY J
WALDMAN, JOHN
„
WELSH, THOMAS W.
WHITE, CHARLES T. ^
WHITE, THOR
WOLTJEN, AI FRED .
.
.

...

FOW
Cook
.. Wiper
- Messmati
OS
Oiler
Cook
Oiler
Messman
Messman
AB
Hosun
Fireman
Oiler
...... Wiper
- Steward
AB
AB
Oiler
- Messman
Wiper
Chief Cook
AB
Cook
Utility
Bosun
- Oiler
Messman
O.S.
FOW

Friday, July 9, 194S

Selective Service:

exception of the lowering of the don was being attacked but how^
benefits for loss of an eye and far back into the city of I.ondon
I attended a conference at Se­ foot, in the Pobltc Lalv No. 17, this attack occurred was never de­
lective Service headquarters re­ has attempted to cover seamen termined, as it was considered an
garding the question of deferment for injuries under the terms Jbi area. We all knbw that London
for Union officials in the maritime the quotation above. It seems to extends over ten mites back from"
industry. All the maritinrt unions me that in the Board's determinf- the docks. All cities are not M
were represented with the excep­ tion to find out what the union large as London, hence, when aiiy
tion of the MMP. The eonference considers an attack, the above city with an area of less than a'
endtfd upf with General Hershey quotation should be considered as mile from the docks is attacked,
suggesting that the union send in definition of an attack.
crews would not be entitled to any
the names of their duly elected of­
On the question of determina­ bonus if thc' attack was outside df
ficials, how many ports the unions tion of any attack, w'e could not the city area. It seems to me thalJ
maintain hiring halls in and the answer this question before we a limit must be set up if we are
officials in each port. How many wete supplied by the Navy infor­ to eliminate confusion when the
the union feels are absolutely nec­ mation as to whether the master crews pay off.
essary to carry on the work, was permitted to make entries into
We have had some cases whcrd
whether they- can be replaced and the log hook when there is an at­ crews have claimed that there was
how long it will take to replace tack.
an attack in the areas that they
them.
were
in and the Board ruled that
The Navy submitted a memorAlso, the Agents should outline andjum to the Board that the mas­ the bombs fell outside of the city
the work they are doing in man­ ter is not permicted to make any limits and the crews were not ent-^
ning the ships, and the necesshy entry in the log bod? when there titled to any bonus. '
'
of having experienced officials who is an atfack on his vessel, or in
On defining the limits of an an­
have been duly elected and whose any area where the vessel may be chorage, my contention was that
dutjr-Jt is to see that the ships are attacked.
any time a ship is at anchor, re­
sailing on schedule and that they
gardless
of where it is anchored,
On the question of defining a
do not miss the convoys.
the
crew
should be entitled to R
port, I contend that the limits of
I advise the Agents to send the port should be at No. 1 sea bonus if there is an attack within
their names, the patrolmen's names, houy, or if a pilot is taken on board the vicinity of thc vessel.
and their draft status. Even if an outside the sea bouy, then when
Ed Coester, Agent of the SUFj
officials name is above the draft the pilot comes aboard, And in in Seattle, sent me a telegram re­
age his name should be sent into addition to this limit, it should be questing that action be takeri
the respective headquarters of the extended further out to sea for a whereby the port area bonus out­
unions so that the Secretary-Treas­ distance of at least ten miles so side of Cape SpeUcer 136 degrees
urer can compile them and send that the vessel has more maneuv­ West Longitude be restored tq
them to Selective Service.
erability in the event of an at­ where it was prior to March 1,
1943. This telegram was read to
tack.
Maritime War
At the present time the Board the Board and is part of the record.
Emergency Board:
has ruled that the Thames Estuary No answer was given by the Bo3r4
The Board held its regular meet­ is not to be considered payable for on what action they are contem­
ing last Wednesday and the follow­ a bonus if vessels in the Thames plating on this request.
ing was On the agenda: 1. 'What do River are entitled to bonus. The
In suming up my testimony, 1
you consider an attack? 2. De­ inshore limits of a port should be, stated that the Union has urged
termination of an attack. 3. How in my opinion, five miles in shore the Board in advisory meeting ^
do you define the limits of a port from the docks.
restore all the port and area bOii-&lt;
(a) off shore (h) on shore. 4.
We have had cases where Lon­
(Continued on Page'})
How do you define the limits of
the anchorage?
My statement regarding an at­
tack is that it should not be limit­
ed to enemy attack, as there may
be cases where vessels may be with­
in range of allied man of war when
they are firing the crews might be
injured. We feel that if they are
within any area wherein there is
an attack regardless of who is do­
ing the attacking, the crews should
he entitled to honiis. There may
he cases where planes may drop
their loads on allied vessels and we
:llso feel that in cdses of this sort,
crews should be entitled to bonuses
and not have the board contend
that the bombs dropped were from
allied planes, and therefore was not
an enemy attack.
« a
In a brief submitted to" the
Board last year, to be exact it was
Aug. 5, 1942, we urged that the
Board give consideration and ex­
tend the benefits for injuries and
defined these injuries as resulting
from—
"The discharge of any miasle
T'i
(including liquids and gae) the
use 0f any weapon/ explosive or
m
other noxious thiarg, the doing
of any injurious act, either by
the enemy or in combatting the
enemy or in repelling an imag­
ined attack by the enemy, in­
juries caused by the impact of
any enemy aircraft, or any air­
craft of the UnitAd States cir .
Allied powers or any part of or
anything dropped from iny
such airordft."
I want to be a worker when f grow up, Mr. Rickenbacker
The Board, in thcif .second sea­
aaya none of them work.
men's war risk insurance, witli the

a

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§a

-V

�THfi SEAFAREIt^^ tOG

Friday Jtily 9, 1943

FT. LAUDERDALE
The members of this Uitfon who
sail as riieSsmert ^ill be very happy
to know that their wages are now
$177.00 per month. Yes, that is
the truth, it was in the newspaper.
And the free press of this great
country demand truth and decen­
cy, or so they say.
- Mr. Henry Mcterhore, y'ho be­
lieves that the merchant seamen
owe their lives, to the Navy Gun
Crews on merchant ships, states
that these gun crews are winning
.the battle of the Atlantic in spite
of the fact that they are requiret
. to work ten hours a day, and while
in battle or under attack they of
_ten stand by tlieir guns twentyfour hours straight. For this, Mr,
McLemore says, they receive $J0
per month as compared with $177
per month and 100% bonus paic
to the messmen of the merchant
crews. Mr. McLemore's generosity
goes even farther. He gives the
messmen Saturday afternoons, Sun
days and Holidays off, and they
are never required to work more
.than eight hours in one day. O:
course Mr. McLemore doesn't men
tion that in addition to their eight
thour day the messmen, as well as
tl« rest of the crew, are requiret
-to pass ammunition and participate
in gun drills. While under attack
everybody works and nobody sleeps
J. K. SHAUGHNESSY,
Agent

GALVESTON
Shipping and business is dead as
' far as We are concerned, and to top
that off the RMO office in Hons
ton has given the Shipping Com
missioner orders not to issue any
more seaman's papers, unless the
man appears with a letter signet
by them. Well, in the May 20th
' issue of the Wash. Merry-Go
Round by Drew Pearson he .statet
that the WSA was staying up
nights, conspiring and figuring
how in the hell they could drive
the Maritime Unions from the seas,
To begin with it is uneonstitu•tional to refuse a citizen of the
U. S. Seaman's papers. Every one
is entitled to sail the seven seas to
make an honest living. Not just
^ those that the RMO can keep the
finger on. It is time to see who,
' and where these WSA and RMO
stooges and fellow travelers have
-the right to deprive a man from
going to sea just because he can
not pass their requirements. , While
I was in Washington this was going
to be attended to. But they have
clamped dotyn harder on us. Every
day on the radio here you can hear,
"You bet I am going back to sea.
All qualified men wire the WSA in
Washington, collect, your rating
, and the date you can .ship. Now is
your time to serve your country in
the Merchant Marine."
Well, right here I have enough
men to man two ships and they are
qualified m^n. But to go through
the RMO office they all say no.
Next week I will give you some
inside dope oti the U.S.S. that is
taking place here in Galveston. Al­
though the SIU, Master Mates &amp;
Pilots and the MEBA, ACA and
the CTU arc against opening, and
running a money wasting, job trust
and an easy life for the charity
fakers, the NMU is the only out-^
fit, along with the shipowners, who
are backing it. In as much as it is
evident that the seamen are sup­
posed to be generous, it might be
a good ideal for the people located
in Washington. It would be a good
idea for the' seamen to take tip a
donation and buy a music box for
the War Shipping Administration

HONOR ROLL

woAT-s tfoma

S.3. Daniel Kuaer

Affoimd the Ports
to install on this Merry-Go-Round
so life there won't be so dull. I
hope that the general public will
take note of these facts and re­
member when they are being led to
believe that the seamen of this na­
tion, along with other production
and transportation workers, are not
wholeheartedly cooperating for a
successful prosecution of this war
for freedom.
Greater love of country hath no
man than this—that he gave his
life to its fullest measure in the

Page Hiree

service of his country, atul to the
vessel in which he served. We
monrn our dead, honor and stil
fight for our living mehdiers.
E. R. WALLACE, Agent

NEW ORLEANS
Things are still on the beam
around here. Members walk up to
the dispatcher's window and start
talking about monies dtte them
from the Joe Blow that never sail

Twenty Ways Not To Cross
The Atlantic

r by Harry McRoberts, Richard Thayer and
John O'Malley

Listen sailors, and you shall hear
A tale that Is long and sad and drear.
An aeoount of a voyage that broke ntieo's hearta,
A tale of woo from the northern parts.

^he men who designed this type of ship
Figured to cut the percentage of slip.
But they never figured the screw would keep dry
As It missed the sea and spun In the sky.
fe

We left New York on a bleak winter's day
And headed north where the submarine* play.
The wolf-packs struck and the wind did how!'
And the seas were high and nasty and foul.
They rolled across the boat deok and down the stack,
The port door was lifted right off with a orack.
The bulwarks split as she pitched and tossed
And the life boats loosened and then were lost.
Fer sixteen days She foiled and she pitched
While the crew lay below and swore and bitched.
'TIM the Irish Sea relief did give
And we thought once more that wo should live.

They warned us the weather was going to be bad
And sent us to sea—we were driving them mad.
They gave us no balladt and took all our oil,
And sent us to act as a submarine foil.
We headed up north and gave her full steam
'Till we broke her back where Northern Light* gleam.
The bow-it did pitch while tho stern stayed «til(,
For she was hinged like a door on a windy hill.
We put the sea on her quarter to ease her shell.
And headed her for Iceland, straight Into Hell.
Run up a lee shore; wind one hundred and ten.
For God's sake, somebody please holler when,
Both anchors down, full steam ahead.
Eighteen fathoms was read by the lead.
That the anchor would hold we all did pray
For the Navy's a million miles away.
But we rode her out and we took her In,
And they patched her sides that were so fhln.
They said, "At torpedo junction you have a date,
So put out to sea or you'll be late."
We joined a convoy which was very slow,
And creeping westward we did go.
From here on out 'twas all clear sailing,
Except for this tune that we're now wailing.
Winches broken, steam line fails,
iceber;^, Ice fields, growlers and gales.
Convoy eoliisions, depth charges and fog,
For downright misery we sure were hogs.
Fuel oil is low and the grub about out.
The crew from their quarters are beginning to shout.
Some have the scurvy, and some have the Itch.
We doabt If we'll live to fill out this hitch.

'• •' •' ) • -' '-iiliJj

.

$33.S(!
. 33.00
28.50
16.00
15.001
15.00^
lAJOQi

v-i

vc

12J)0
12.00
8.0O
800
750
, 74)0
i 7.00
6.00
&amp;00
6.00
. 5.00
4.00
.. 3.00
' 3.00
3.00
1.00
$^2.00

GEORGE R. LANG "
Your union book Is in headquaM
tors office.
*

*

*

I

A. BYRON COFFIN, Jr.

Your papers have been found an#
turned Into headquarters office.
* » *
J. McKEON

I

•f

Please contact your much worried
wife. She promises to fix up all
difficulties if you will return.
« * *
A, MILFORD

'

Important that you drop Into th#
headquarters office next time yoU
are in New York City.

Washington Report

We took over Lime Street, Invaded Its pubs,
And after hours we sought out the diubs.
We took all their women and took all the drink*
And fihally left with their curse and a jinx.

When off from our bow "The Lady" doe* stand—
The one with the light held high in her hand.
At ue she^ may look a* we're In Ward bound,
But she'll never guess our feeling profound.

ed, etc., etc. When you stop them
and ask what ship, where did you
pay off, why didn't you take it up
there, then you receive—the full
blast of the old bla bla. "I pay my
dues, I demand my rig'hts, I am
and have been a member since away
back when." (This organization
by my figures gathered in conver­
sation with this type member is at
least four hundred and fifty
years
old). In other words, if you take a
beef from one port to another for
God's sake bring something besides
a whiskey breath to back your argtiment.
Lately we have been having a
little trouble here with the superdupcr militants that raise hell on
pay off day with three or four
drinks under their belts. The same
guys kiss all trip at sea and in ports
they stick the other guys to stand
their watches. These gents should
remember that this demand won't
last for seamen longer then the
war. When the war is over, then
my boySf a lot of records will be
looked over and a lot of trouble
raisers will be left out.
There is a hell of a lot of dif­
ference between the man who
brings in his beefs and turns them
in to his patrolAan or Agent for
action, and the donkey that just
beefs.
Remember in the port of New
Orleans the drunks either settle
their own beefs or get off and stay
off while the patrolmen does settle
tlxm.
Did you evgr hear of the ship
that was so busy that she couldn't
come back home? (Shorty Hughes,
Ray Murdo, etc., take note, she is
here looking for a crew.)
ARMY, Agent

S.8. Benj. Botrrn
S.S. Schoharie
S.S. City of Savannah
S.S. James Dunn
S,8. Joseph Hewes
Henrv Harzold
Steward Dept.
S.S. Francis Marion
B. Barton
T. C. Heard
Edaar Teaaue
S.S. pubore
S.S. Lamar
S.S. Gateway City
C. Matthews
A. Smith
f
T. Paul
J. P. Brennan
F. Parks
S. S. Wheelock
J. Stickney
F. DeHanev
A. S. Nelson

j

,

{Continued from Page 2)
there was no attack and no bonus
uses that were in effect prior to is payable.
March 1, 1943, and to the origin­
I fail to understand why shipS
al port and area bonuses of $125 crews would put in a claim for a
for every entry a vessel makes in bonus if there had been no attack.
the port or area. It is my opinion The officers are in a position to
that the Board cannot administer substantiate their claims. But the
any attack bonus with any sense officers' and crews' words are nol
of fairness, as it is too cumbersome considered as being trustworthy,
a job for the Board to get all the at least according to the majority
available information as to when of the decisions handed down
there was an attack. Particularly the Board.
in view of the fact that the master
It therefore becomes apparent t^
of the vessel is prohibited from me that the attack bonus cannot
making entries in the log book be properly administered by the
when there has been an attack. Past Board and the only logical bonus
experience with the Board has that the Board can determine with
shown us that the word of the any fairness, is the system that the
master or members of the crew is Union and the operators had
insufficient evidence to satisfy the agreed upon prior to the War. And
Board that there has been an at­ that is, every time a vessel enters
tack. Hence the Board must rely any port or area the crew would be
..Xie.
on other information to satisfy a entitled to a bonus for the addi­
claim for bonus. This information
tional hazard encountered in en­
from other government sources is
not always available to the Board, tering these ports or areas.
and the unions are not supplied
this information by other govern­
ment agencies. In most cases the
agencies which supply this infor­
mation are the Army and Navy
departments.
The present system of adminis­
trating the attack bonus does not
P801Z
seem to be satisfactory. Nine out PETER JACKSON
EDWARD
BIRCH
of ten cases are submitted to the
^
Joard by the Unjpn are disquali­ J SCORTINO
J.
B.
PILGRIM
fied by the Board and no bonus is
&gt;ayable. In the majority of thesei O. BOUCHIE
cases the Board has ruled that ftom GEORGE H. ALDRIDGE
the information that they have BOYCE IBARTON

�Page Four

THE 5EAFARERS* LOG

Friday, July 9, 1943

Radio Commentators^
Dept Of Commerce Clarifies
Is Traced
Wage Computation For Seamen Ancestry
Hy /. K. Shaugknessy

;I

i
|y,J t
|t ^ I

counted as a whole day. For ex­
Did you ever try to figure out "where the shakes wenti
ample, from the afternoon of March
1 to March 4, both inclusive, is when Saint Patrick drove them out of Ireland? Well, I
reckoned as 4 days; 3nd from
March 1 to the forenoon of March have, and for years I was in the dark on this reptilian ques­
Disputes in fegard to the time 4, both inclusive, is reckoned as 4 tion. At long last the dawn has come.
when the wages began to accrue days.
When the slimy creatures were routed from the ooze
rarely involved more than 1 or
But if a seaman be entitled to
days, and they are usually adjuster wages from the afternoon of one
grabbed
by the ship's log, although if there
day to the forenoon of another these United States, and took job: this "Anti Strike Bill," if a news­
is doubt arising from the absence
paper columnist or Radio News
day, the two fractions of a day are
of proper entry in the log or sus­ considered as 1 day only. For ex­ as newspaper columnists and radio Commentator were to tell the
To United States Ship- picious interlining, or other cause ample, the time from the after­ news commentators.
truth about it, he would last about
p i n g: Commissioners, the seamen's statement may be ac­ noon of March 1 to the forenoon A newspaper columnist or news­ as long as a soldier's pay-day in a \
caster will not become a success juke joint.
Collectors and Deputy cepted.
of March 4, both inclusive, is
nor will he last long if, 1- He tells
Collectors Acting as 2. The column in the shipping days.
the truth, the whole truth anc
Shipping Commission­ articles headed "Place and date of 6. In computing the amount of nothing but the truth. 2. If he betliis agreement" contains wages due, the number of calendar icves the country belongs to the
ers, and Others Con­ signing
the date of the agreement. It does months (commencing on the day jeople and as such should be run
cerned :
STEPHEN
MORGAJN, KNUT
not indicate the time when wages on which wages began to accrue)
yy the people.
CATO,
E.
M.
ALLAIN:
You have
is to be determined first; to this is
The following rules will be ob­ are to begin.
two
months,
nine
days
difference
irt-.
On
the
first
subject
we
can
take
to be added the fractional part of
served by United States shipping
3. The agreement is considered
Fireman and Watertender pay, and
hr
an
example
the
steamroller
month
determined
by
counting
commissioners and collectors and as referring to calendar months,
one month, nine days bonus coming
deputy collectors of customs act­ defined as the time from any day each and every day beyond the final that went through the U. S. Senate from the Waterman Line.
and the House of Representatives
ing as shipping commissioners in of a month, to the corresponding day of the last full month.
»
»
»
i ,
ast week. It was commonly
computing amounts due American day (if any, and if not, to the last
For example:
cnown
as
the
"Anti
Strike
Bill.
seamen as wages—
January 29 to March 3 (in­ This bill does not have the support Deck Department which made /
day) of the next month.
clusive) equals 1 month' 3 of the people, nor. was it passed last voyage on S.S. George Gale
1. -The date written in the colFor example;
days.
umrr of the shipping articles head­
•or the benefit of the people. Yet has overtime coming from Missies*,
January
29
to
February
28
is
January
31
to
March
3
(in­
ed "Time at which to be on board"
or weeks, prior to the passage of ippi Line.
1
month
clusive)
equals
1
month
3
«•
»
*
'
is taken as the time when a seathe bill, the press and radio pubJanuary
31
to
February
28
is
days.
mah's' wages should commence,
ished statements that the people Entire Qeck Department of S.S.
1 month.
June IS to October iJ (in­
provided he was on board or duly
were
clamoring for the enactment Josiah Parker has overtime duei
February 28 to March 27 is
clusive equals 5 months 29
presented himself to go on board
of
such
n bill.
Collect Mississippi Steamship Com&lt;!&lt; '
1 month.
days.
at that time.
pany. Now Orleans.
Tliis
was
a
half
truth,
the
people,
March 28 to .April 27 is 1
June 1S to November 13 (in­
I
If he went on board" before that
month.
clusive) equals S months. a small percentage of the people,
« « «
date with the consent and subject
June IS to November 14, (in­ were demanding the passage of the
4. In computing the amount
clusive) equals S months. bill, but the vast majority of the Steward Dept. S.S. Fitzburgh Lee
to the orders of the master, he is
due
for
a
fraction
of
a
month,
30
people were never in favor of such have money due from Smith ft
Approved:
deemed to have commenced work
days
is
counted
as
a
month
without
Johnson, 80 Broad St.
aixd to be entitled to wages from
SECRETARY OF COMMERCE legislation. The proponants of the
regard
to
its
length.
For
example,
**,
*
I
bill, violated the first principle of
the date of going on board.
I diys in any month are one-sixth
the bill in the manner by which Deck ft Engine Dept. S.S. Samuel ~
If he failed through his own of a month.
they
steamrollered it over the Griffin having personel effect*
3. Any fraction of a day is DUTCH GAINS
fault to join the ship at the time
President's veto. The Act requires claim see Robin Line claim agent,
MADE BY I.T.F.
a cooling off period before a vote 39 Cortland St., N. V. C.
to strike can be put into effect. Ycr Steward Dept. S.S. Broholt Liv&lt;
they themselves would not allow a ingston have overtime coming. CoN.
{Continued fr&amp;m Pa^e 1)
cooling off period, but demanded lect Bull Line.
In addition to living cost allow­ that a vote be taken immediately
ances, Dutch seafarers incapacit­ to overide the veto of the Presi­
;« « «
ated for ship duty received month- dent. Without an opportunity to J. McLEON: Four hours duC
y wages ranging from £3 for boys think over the effect of their ac­ from Mississippi Shipping Com&lt;«
and
£4 for ordinary seamen to tion, the members of Congress pany.
The Navy states that the enemy subs have been beaten, but the
£S for an A.B. and £S.10.0 for were forced into voting on a ques­
SIU lost more ships for tlie months of May and June than we did for ligher ratings. These payments
tion that vitally effects the every­
any previous mofith except in June '42. It raised our casualty list to may be reduced by 40% or less in day lives of the people. Yet the
r. FiAYMpiyD; $42.50 cbming^.
from
the S.S. Tarleton Brown.
.
743 brothers lost through enemy action. We don't know who is being all cases where other suitable em- loud - mouthed capitalist stooges
fooled by. our Government withholding information concerning the jloyment has been procured. Men that are supporting the bill de­
Oilers on last trip of S.S. Dbi
loss of merchant ships and their personnel. The enemy questions the placed in hospitals, sanatorian or manded that the representatives of
nursing homes are not entitled to the people vote without consulting Norte have overtime coming. Col­
crew of each torpedoed ship and knows the names of the ships. We living cost allowances. Funeral ex­
the people they are representing.
ihippose this question will not be answered until after the war is over. penses are borne by the -Netherland The people do not want this bill lect from Mississippi Line, 17 Baftery Place, New York City.
authorities which may also contri­ and never will want it.
* • *
,
.
bute to the funeral expenses of a
Firemen on S.S. Richard Alvey
The Bull Line is living up to its bad reputation as to handling member of the seaman's family.
have overtime coming. Collect Bull
N,M.U,
SABOTAGES
survivors of their torpedoed ships. Recently,, one of their ships was
Line, New York City.
»
•
torpedoed and the crew reached Ascension Island after ten. days. They EDITOR'S MAIL BAG OFFICERS' BEEF
ON PRICES
were given one day's rest and then were told that they would have to Editor:
Crew S.S. Francis Marion havf
break a certain quantity of rocks and carry cinders and if they didn't
attack
bonus due. Collect Roblfi ;
Would you kindly ins«-t in the
{Continued from Page 1)
,do their quota of work, they would be forced to work longer. If they Log a word of thanks from the
Line, New York City.
Warning to the seamen: Be on the
.^ill refused, the Captain told them that his man stationed on the crew of the S.S, John Henry to
alert;
these self-styled "friends of
Island would be glad to shoot them on the slightest occasion. That is the chief steward C. G. Bailey.
the workers" are .flooding the Firemen and Ordinaries on S.8*
th$ way merchant seamen are treated when they get torpedoed.
Our ship was on an eleven schools and are sailing as officers. Livingstone have overtime due. Sea
month voyage and Brother Bailey Their servile attitude - toward the Goffin, New York Branch.
gave the crew the greatest cooper­ (shipowners') WSA makes them
« « a
ation and should be commended dangerous to the existence of all
The WSA and the USS inform the public of what good they are
Crew S.S. John Stevens and .S.iS.
for it.
militant seamen and their unions. Pan Gulf have attack bonus com*
doing for the unfortunate seamen. When survivors arrive at a foreign
(signed)
Once more, be on the alert!.
ng. Collect Waterman Line, '19
port the WSA representative has them shoved into a hold of any ship
Joe (Windy) Walsh
Rector St., New York City,
—Third Mate
that is in port. He does not concern himself with whether these men
S. A. Stansbury
Joe Lightfoot
get anything to eat . . . they just have to shift for themselves. Then
B. F. Gordy
ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
when they arrive at the first American Port the FBI and Naval Intel­
Albert Jackson
ligence hound them every minute and won't let the boys contact their
COMPLETE MONTH OF JUNE
Herbert Clark
Union and they don^t care if the boys have any money or a place to
Charles Riddle
JJECk ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL
John H. Williams, Jr.
sleep in.
SHIPPED
.. 987
654
602
2,243
Francis N. Kelley
The USS bmgs about the six million dollar furiu they
Dale
Housner
have on hand, but little is done for the boys who jre torpedoed, except
REGISTERED _
__ 536 '
609295
1,440
. "Edwin J.. Baer
those guys who hang around the Furuseth Club and were torpedoed in
Alva Mogensen
ON HAMa
316
281.
274j
$71
3 bath-tub. Everyone is making money on the seaman and he's the goat.
Lester F. Hath
The U. S. Department of Com­
merce has issued to all Shipping
Commissioners a clarification as
to the procedure for computing
•seamen's wages. Printed below is
the directive. It should be studied
by all brothers so that they can't
be shoved around on the question
of pay.
*
». »

specified in the articles, his wages
accrue only from the time at whic'
he went on board and reported for
duty.

MONEY DUE

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Out of the Foesl

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N.M.U STOOGES SABOTAGE OFFICER CANDIDATES' BEEFS ON PRICES&#13;
CREWS' HEALTH AND SAFETY TRHEATENED BY TREATMENT OF GERMAN WAR PRISONERS&#13;
DUTCH GAINS WON THROUGH I.T.F.&#13;
SEE END OF LIBERTY TUBS&#13;
TWENTY WAYS NOT TO CROSS THE ATLANTIC&#13;
DEPT. OF COMMERCE CLARIFIES WAGE COMPUTATION FOR SEAMEN&#13;
RADIO COMMENTATORS' ANCESTRY IS TRACED</text>
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                    <text>Curran Bankruptcy
Is Revealed At
NMU Convention

OFFICIAL OEGAN OP THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA

During this past week the Na­ gether by a deal with the bosses
tional Maritime Union held its rather than by fighting
the
in
VOL. V.
NEW YORK, N. Y., FRIDAY, JULY 16, 1943
No. 16
annual convention in New York bosses.
City. ^For six days hand-picked
Echoing the boss slander
delegates dutyfully applauded about discipline aboard the
as a seemingly endless parade of ships, Curran declared that
speakers discussed everything those guilty of "misconduct"
but the real problems which should not only ibe expelled from
face the seamen today. This the union but have their certifi­
convention - served only to fur­ cates suspended and be brought
The SIU-SUP has voted on both coasts to accept the
ther expose the criminal betray­ before the Coast Guard for dis­
Draft Board Refuses
al of maritime labor by Curran cipline.
RMO
registration cards. This -was done after months of
To Reclassify Strikers
&amp; Company, and to reveal the
battle against the phoney WSA set-up, and only after it
AIMED AT SIU-.SUP
McKEESPORT, Pa.—Here's
Stalinist trade union line for
became
clear that the best interests of the rank and file sea­
Should
such
a
program
be
one draft board that isn't
what it is—pure finkery!
shoved through, no militant
men demanded such a step.
afraid to stand up against
At a time when the shipown­ union man would be able to go
' Not only the WSA was lined up
anti-labor
state
and
federal
ers control the government's to sea. The mere questioning of
against us on this issue, but
administrators.
maritime apparatus and use the Stalinist sell-out tactics
the full power of the Army brass
The
board
refused
to
re­
their new authority to slash at would be sufficient for the NMU
hats
and their allies in th^ fink
classify
three
striking
bus
union security and conditions, at leaders to finger a man. This
led NMU. The Army was threat­
drivers.
a time when union seamen are would conceivably affect the SIU
ening to draft our members if
Said John T. Walsh, board
dying by the hundreds at sea and SUF as well as the licensed
they failed to accept these cards^
chairman;
"This
is
a
labor
only to have the bosses sit safe­ officers' unions. For with the
and our union was simply un­
dispute and it isn't our job
ly - at home and pile up profits NMU in the role of stool-pigeon,
able
to settle it. We won't stand
WASHINGTON, July 13—Es­ Lssue.to buck the military on this
and plan for the fink hall after the security of any individual
for intimidation of workmen
tablishment of the War Ship­
their war has been won by the union man would be endangered
because they will not do
NMU SABOTAGE
ping Panel to consider and make
workers, the Stalinist leaders of for alleged "misconduct." If any
what employers say."
Had maritime labor been
recommendations on applica­
the NMU spend six whole days government board accepts the
tions^ for voluntary wage and 'united on this issue from the
beating their guns without ut­ NMU recommendations, they
salary adjustments and on labor first, it would have been a dif­
tering a single word of militant would be in a position to sap
disputes involving the shipping ferent story. Then the fuU eco­
unionism.
the strength of the AFL sea­
industry was announced today nomic strength of all seamen
CURRAN'S GUESTS
men's unions through individual
by the National War Labor could have been decisively mobil­
The platform at the conven­ suspension of certificates.
ized against the Washington
Board.
tion* was practical^ ononopollFurther, any individual NMU
union-thaters. But this was not
All
personnel,
both
relief
and
ized by such anti-union charac­ man suspended by Curran for
the
case. The Stalinist leaders
regular
crews,
employed
on
all
ters as Captain Edward Macaul- anti-Stalinist opinions, would be
in
the
NMU, acting in accord­
ships,
including
dry
cargo,
tank­
ey who lectured and scolded the prohibited from joining the AFL
NEW YORK CITY—President
ance
with
the finky sell-oiit line
ers,
barges
and
towboats
engag­
seamen for their failure to hop, because his certificate would be William Green called upon the
peddled
by
13th Street, not only
skip and jump every time a la­ lifted. In short, only finks at six million members of the ed in off-shore, coastwise har­
accepted
the
cards but actively
bor hathig mate or brass hat heart would be safe from the American Federation of Labor bor, and inland waterways ac­
campaigned
for
them through­
tivities will be considered under
barked at them. And each, time purge. ^
to defeat for re-election every the jurisdiction of the JW.ar_Ship- out the waterfronts of America.
the men were insulted in this
member of Congress who voted ping Panel.
POST WAR PLANS
FUiUM STRUGGLES
manner, the Stalinist leadership
for
the anti-labor Conn allyThe panel will consist of six We frankly admit that in this
would jump up and endorse the Fortunately the Stalinists are Smith Act.
members, with two representing case the combined power of the
slanders and call for "remedial not sufficiently strong to shove
such a program down the sea­
Addressing the delegates at the public, two representing in­ shipowners —WSA — Army and
steps."
men's throats. But they are a
For it was obvious that the resourceful enemy of the work­ the convention of the Interna­ dustry, and two labor. The their NMU stooges was too great
NMU leadership was not inter­ ing class, and they will not be­ tional Longshoremen's Associa­ members, who will be appointed to buck in time of war. The ac­
later, will serve on a per diem ceptance of the RMO cards is a
ested in Conditions for the men come discouraged easily. In fact, tion, Brother Green declared:
—they were interested only in one of the principal demands of
"Get ready for the fight in basis. Alternate members may defeat for the union movement
•make no mistake about that.
imposing upon the waterfront the convention was for "an in­ 1944. Go back home and organ­ also be appointed.
their own finky line and collect­ dustry-wide labor, management ize, Let the members of Con­ The chairman and vice chair­ But it is by no means the de­
ing dues for the Stalinist appar­ and government set up in the gress know that labor never for­ man will be a public member. cisive or final battle with the
atus. All the convention talk merchant marine following the gets. Let them know that they Industry members and their al­ enemy.
Following is the SUP resolu­
about the cheqjc-off system was war." In other words, they hope are going to be defeated if they ternates will be appointed by
tion
on the acceptance of the
not because the leadership was to continue to act as thejaosses' trample upon the rights of the the board from nominees sub­
cards.
It wa.s concured in by
concerned about giving union finger men after "the war as well working men of our country.
mitted by industry members of
the
SIU
Branches voting up and
security to the seamen, but.^ be­ as during it. They don't even inthe board. Similarly, labor mem­
down
the
coast.
"Six
million
members
of
our
cause the bankruptcy of the vision a struggle against the
bers and their alternates will be
American
Federation
of
Labor
NMU is becoming clear to an in­ shipowners once the Axis has
recommended by the board's la­
RESOLU'nON
creasing number of its members. been defeated. If their fink pro­ have been penalized and insult­ bor members and appointed by
WHEREAS, the SUF on a coast­
Finding it difficult to collect gram flops now—they will at­ ed by the action of Congress in the board.
*
wise scale in the month of
enacting the Connally - Smith
dues without giving the men tempt it again in peace time.
The panel's findings and rec­
March 4vent on record almost
Bill over the President's veto."
representation, without settling
ommendations
will be filed with unanimously as being opposed
UNION
UP-SERVICE
their beefs land fighting for con­
Mr. Green charged that Con­ the national board, which will to signing the RMO fink cards,
ditions, Curran hopes to keep On the very final day of the gress "wrote a page of shame make a final
decision in the
them in line with the check-off. Convention the NMU leaders did for the party in control of the cases. The panel's headquarters the so-called "deferment" cards,
as being a move to drive a wedge
He hopes to keep the union to­
{Continued on Page 4)
Government" by passage of the will be in the offices of the na­ against our hiring halls and to
tional board.
bill.
establish a black listing system

BRASS HAT SQUEEZE FORCES
ACCEPTANCE OF RMO CARDS
,r .

' •

—

W.L.B. SETS UP
MARITIME
PANEL

Green Calls For
Purge 0^ Labor'
Haters In Congress

GROWTH of the U S. MERCHANT MARINE
tcmpMt

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frtii fMi

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&lt;

AMrcAdAf MtrriN 4et
f 1929

l*3«

i

thttlmi mri»4 tut 01$3*

»&gt;7 &lt;£&lt;£%£££%

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CGMMIUION -OWI

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Radio Play Salutes S.U.P.
Men For Unusual Courage
The SUP crew of the S.S.
Coast Farmer which ran a Jap­
anese-naval blockade from Aus­
tralia to the Phillippines to de­
liver high test gasoline and ex­
plosive shortly after Pearl Har­
bor, was the subject of a radio
drama entitled "The Plow that
Broke the Sea."
Heard over the National
Broadcasting Company network
on July 4, the program was the
first of a series of 8 which wfil
tell of the wartime shipbuilding
program and ship operations as
conducted by the Maritime Com­
mission.

k

The program paid high trib­
ute to the SUP men, pointing
out the fact that it takes the
competent seamanship of ex­
perienced men to handle ships
in war time.
The rest of the programs,
scheduled for each Sunday eve­
ning at 6:30, will probably fall
far short of the first, for they
are advertised as "telling the
story of the Recruitment and
Manning Organization." Such
material could make an inter­
esting broadcast, but not in the
way it will probably be present­
ed over NBC.

on the spme line as the old
Shipping Board fink halls, and
WHEREAS, at that time the
MC&amp;S and the MFOW&amp;W a^
went on record to fight this vi­
cious blacklisting system, but at
a later date these union officials
reversed themselves and recom­
mended to their membership to
sign these fink cards, the same
as the comics in the NMU, and
WHEREAS, recently conniving
politicians in the RMO, sub-di­
vision of the WSA, are working
hard and in cahoots with the
Selective Service and Draft
Boards, to put the finger on SUB
men and refusing to give them
their deferments unless the re­
quest for the men's draft defer­
ment card comes through the
RMO, and
(ContinueJ on Page 4)

�THE SEAFARERS' L O G*

Page Two

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

Friday July 16, 1943 -

RfpoTiT orv

SEAFARERS' iNTERNATiONAL UNION
QF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
MARITIME WAR EMERGENCY ments' that our members may His great achievement is that
when colored persons are dis­
BOARD:
have on this matter.
HARRY LUNDEBERG ------ President
In my last report on The director of Maritime In­ patched to vesels, the whitd
110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.
the advisory committee's meet­ surance, Mr. Percy Chubb, has crews are compelled to slqpp in
ing, I stressed the point that the issued Supplement No. 1, of War­ the same room with the colored
JOHN HAWK
------- Secy-Treas,
board should set some definite time Insurance Instruction No. persons or else they are expelled
P. O. Box 25, Station P„ New York City
rules and set limits to "cover 4, and effective July 15, 1943. from the Union. This is the
'Hwhen the attack bonus is pay­ The rate of $7.50 per $1,000 of philosophy preached by the
MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Rep.
able.
insurance for each month of great Joe, and he attributes the
424 5 th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
In checking on the bonus dis­ coverage, regardless of the voy­ sailing of NMU ships to this
putes that have been submitted age involved, is reduced hereby philosophy, and boasts of how;
this contributes to the War ef­
to the board by the SUP and to $4.00 per $1,000.
Directory of Branches
fort.
SIU, my record here shows that - This is for any additional in­
PHONE
ADDRESS
the board has ruled over 50 per surance that seamen may care Joe now wants to make a fur­
BRANCH
cent of our claims out. This, to to take. The original $5,000 that ther contribution to the' war ef­
NEW YORK
2 Stone St
Dispatcher's Office
BOwliing Green 9-3430
me, is ample proof that the covers seamen is part of our fort in his fight against discrim­
Agent
BOwling Green 8-3437
BOSTON
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
board's decision is either not be­ agreement, as per the boards de­ ination. Not content with color­
BALTIMORE
14 North Gay St.
Caivert 4539
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St
Lombard 7651
ing properly administrated, or cision, and is still supplied by ed men and white men sleeping
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-10S3
they lack ample proof that there the employer to every member together in the same room on,
NEW ORLEIANS
309 Chartres St
Canal 3336
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St.
Savannah 3-1728
was lan attack, or if there was of the crew without any cost to NMU ships, he now wants to
TAM^
:::
423 East Platt St.
Tampa MM-1323
include that there shall be no
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St
Dial 2-1392
an attack, they still haven't set the seaman.
PUERTO RICO
45 Ponce de Leon
Puerto de Tterra
discrimination
because of SEX,
up any specific rules whereby
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-8043
All seamen are hereby cau­ Joe and a few NMU men who
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway. .Ft. Lauderdale 1601
claims can be properly judged. tioned to be on their guard if
My feeling on this matter is they take out this additional in­ were torpedoed, met with Presi­
that the board should set up surance, and they must state dent Roosevelt, and the great
PUBLICATION OFFICE;
rules which will clarify when an that they v/ant this additional emancipator asked the President
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
attack occured, and in my last insurance to cover disability. why women were being discrim­
New York City
, BOwhng Green 9-8346
report I defined what I feel Otherwise the additional" insur­ inated against by not being em^^
should coyer an attack. I would ance will only cover them in ployed on board vessels. The
President' agreed with Joe that
appreciate comments from the case of death.
women
should. be employed on
members. My opinion is that the
board
American
vessels.
INTERNAL
REVENUE:
membership .should overhaul all
The
NMU
is
n6w
holding its
the questions that Agent Weis- Some: companies have jjeen
annual
convention
and
the dele­
berger asked the board and sub­ deducting Victory tax on men's
gates
are
flooding,
the
WSA
with
mit what they feel would adequ­ transportation. Have requested
telegrams
demanding
that
-vyornately cover the confused situa­ a ruling from the director of
tion
of defining the limits under the internal revenue, and' ex­ en be employed on board Ameri­
The Belgian seamen's movement, though hard hit by
can vessels.
which port attacks should be pect an answer soon.
the war and having lost close to 900 men through enemy myablo. i am of the opinion that
As the NMU. policy is that, all
THE BAITLE AGAINST
persons are created equal re­
action, has made considerable strides in recent years and oc­ Agent Weisberger's letter fully DISCRIMINATION:
cupies today a leading position among the Allied nations so covers the questions. What we Joe Curran, President &lt;of the gardless of race, color or creed,
and that segration is discrim­
far as union organization of the seafarers is concerned, an now need are the answers to his National Maritime Union, Is a ination, and that all persons re­
etter, which I'll quote.
TTF survey of Belgian merchant^
man to reckon with these days. gardless of race, color or creed,
ers
and
the
officers
and
men's
'A vessel is anchored within According to tjie PILOT he is shall work, eat and sleep to­
inarine conditions states.
organizations, grants substantial
The report was furnished by improvements with regard to the confines of a river, bay, har­ the outstanding leader in the gether, we can probably all see
Omer Becu, Belgian seafarers' waiting pay, death and accident bor, etc., awaiting orders as to fight against discriipination, what the great Joe is visualizing.
representative in the United compensation, and, old age pen­ what shall be done with the land .as an emancipator for the So we can look forward to the
States, and was madie public by sions. Though wages remain the ship; whether to proceed to an­ peoples rights, regardless of day when the NMCIJ ships will be
the American office of, the In­ same, the daily pay allowance in other anchorage or pier, or leave race, color, or creed, he ranks manned as follows:
ternational Transport Workers' foreign ports has been raised for some other port in some the topis.
Bosum's room (certified two
Federation, with which the Bel­ from 10s to 13s for men and other body of water. Or the ship The NMjU PILOT also boasts persons to a room by U. iS.
gian Seamen's Union is afl^- from 12s to 17s for officers. Ad­ remains at -anchor within a that through his valiant courage Steamboat Inspectors)
givbn body of water considered
ated.
ditional free food and lodging as inside or outside of the bar, and leadership the NMU is the Lower bimk, Joe Curran, bosun
only union that has adopted, the —upper bunk, Elsie Doublebotfacilities are provided in Ameri­ jetty, breS-kwater, etc.
33% OF MEN LOST
policy of no discrimination, and tom, 'carpenter, »
With loss of life amounting to can and Canadian ports.
A vesel is at anchor outside or that laU the NMIU members have Sailors' Foc'sl (certified four
nearly one-third of the Belgian
inside the bar, breakwater, etc., equal rights, work, eat, and
peraons to a room by tl. S.
merchant seamen sailirig for the
or tied up to the docks, or under sleep together just like one big Steamboat Inspectors)
Allied cause, the Belgian sea­
way from the docks to an 'an­ happy family.
{Continued on Page 3),
men's movement has neverthe­
chorage, or from ah ahciforai^
less been able to hold its own
to a dock.'
To Fight Again
arid to reorganize its forces scat­
If an attack is made by sub,
MiMON HENRY FORGETTE:
tered all^ over the globe, it was
Your union book, Australian surface ship, planie, or forces
siaid.
registfation and as^rted papers ashore, what woiild be the ai'ea
to be defined as .port or anchor­
, The Belgian seafarers abroad arc in the Norfolk SIU Hail.
age?"
' "
are organized nearly 100, per
J.
H.
WHI'TEFIELD
There are other questions that
cent, thus marking the best pro7
portion of seamen's unionization ' Picket cards, photognpaphs and would involve the claim for pay
among the Allied nations, Mr. papers are in Norfolk SIU Hall. ment on an attack bonus. It is
nigh impossible to list all of
Bpcu observed.
A. MICHLEAU
them.
My opinion is that the
Wages and working conditions Your sbirts were removed from
membens
should give a little
Dynistic and are now in
are superior to those of the Brit­ the
thought
to
the different prob­
ish seamen, the report pointed the New York hall. Please call
lems
that
come
up regarding
out. An A.B. seaman receives for them.
their claims, and submit them
in monthly wages and war
to their respective headquarters
bonus and £2 monthly contin­
so that the Union can bring
uous service allowance, a total
them before the membership for
of £27. The monthly wages and
action.
war bonus of a second mate or
INSURANCE:
third engineer amount to £35
At the last advisory board
plus £3 continuous service allowmeeting, I made an attempt to
^ce and £6 Ids for stipulated
cover some of the problerhs of
overtime work. The men are^aid THEODORE STEINC^
I?'"?'
ii''^'B»^l^'S,l^avypholinr^hpi^-i}rfrPB::l^rP^
JOE COUREY
our members in their claims for
at, the rate of 2s an hour for
PETER JACKSON ....
P8017 attack bonus, and made certain B The barnacled deck of the battleship QI^AHOIVIA,* capsizijd
overtime.
••'If
EDWARD
BIRCH
recommendations to the board. «unk at her moorings m the Japanese sneak attack od Pmrt Harbof
i
NEW AGREEMENT SIGNED J SCORTINO
However, my opinion is that the December 7,1941, breaks water in tfie first step in the now well-ad?
vanced pi-ocess of returning her to Active dul^/ Fire bf her
An agreement recently con- J. B. PILGRIM
ihen who are actually undergo­ guns
appear as she is slowly righted in a diodern miracle of ealvagb
4;luded in England between rep^ 6. BpUCHIE
ing the attack aire more qualified op^atio^, wUob will eventuk^ bee all,but tbiee Oi .Ibo N^ftvy wiftpf
resentatiyes of the Belgian Gpy- GEORGE H. ALDRIDQE
to make recommendations, arid" dkinagea on tbkt taVetvH day bak la aciibn. ^
ofnment in Exile, the shipown­ B6YCE BARTON '
I would appreciate' any coitiAffiliated with the American Vederation of Labor

Belgian Seamen's Union
Marks Gain In New Pact

..

•

5- .

�Friday, July \6, 1943

THE SEAFARERS* LOG

WHArS DOING

Around the Ports
NORFOLK

500 hours overtime for the boys
land the ones that were nonUnion decided that we had
something and wanted to join
up. It seems that the ship had
been run as the officers wanted
to run it.
It is DAMN queer to me why
men that are sailing ships that
are non-union can't see where a
union will be of benefit to them
On that one trip alone the
non-union and what is left of
the NMU collected more over­
time than they had iii the last
six months.
I received a cablegram from
one of the crew on the Pan Or­
leans that Bro. Walter Smith,
Book No. 100 had died in Ha­
vana this past week. He had
been Boatswain on there for al­
most one year and was well
liked by all the crew and officers.
He was one hundred percent
union brother and ship mate
and we regret his passing awiay.
We also extend our sympathy
to his family.
Steady as she goes between
the anchors.
D. L. PARKER,
Agent

Page Three

Washington Report
(Conthui^d from Page 2)
Lower bunk No, L, Blackey Mey­
ers, able seaman.
Upper bunk No^ 2., Maggie
Deeptank, able seawoman.
Lower bunk No. 3., Joe Stack,
able seaman.
Upper bunk No. 4,^ Julie Shaftalley, able seawoman.
Watertenderg' Foc'sl (Certified
for 4 per:;ons, U. S. Steamboat
Inspectors)
•Lower bunk No. 1, Howard McKenzie, watertender
Upper bunk No. 2„ Sadie Breasthook, watertender.
Lower bunk No. 3., Bevo Mil­
ler, Watertender.
Upper bunk No. 4., Sophie
Scupper, watertender.
Wipers' Foc'sl ^(Certified for 2
persons, U. S. Steamboat In­
spectors)
Lower bunk No. 1., Jack La wrensen, wiper.
Upper bunk No. 2., Effie Bilgediver, wiper.
Cooics' room (Certified for 2
persons, (U. S. Steamboat In­
spectors).
Lower bunk No, 1., Ferdinand
Smith, chief cook.
Upper bunk No. 2., Jane Chopingblock, 2nd cook.
FLASH —Been advised thiat all

the skippers are going to make
a trip to Washington to see the
President, and demand that
their quarters be certified for
two persons—and that they do
not want a hairy chief mate on
their vessel. They are going to
demand that progress be made,
and that they are all in favor
of having their chief mates,
pretty and petit with cruiser
sterns and fairly trimmed beast
plates.
I can see a scowl on the face
of some of the old timers, but
brothers the days are over when
a decent sailor could join the
Chileano navy, get* three good
meals a day and a boy and a
blanket. So let's up the anchor
and heave away for RIO with
the NMU new battle cry,' "We
will keep them sailing if the
WSA allo%vs us to take our haybags along."
There is a rumor around here
that Ckjmrade Stalin has con­
demned Admiral Land as an
enemy of the people, because he
refuses to allow women to sail
on American vessels and has vio-^
latcd the President's, executive
order on discrimination, and
thereby is classed as a counter
revolutionist.

standing sea watches in Oran=
You are paid, in addition to
100%
bonus, $5.00 per day for
Business is booming in Nor­
being in an unsafe harbor, and
folk with quite a few old time
you cannot have both your $5.00
faces showing up for a day or
per day for danger, and your
so, then in the usual course
overtime for standing watches
moving on, either aboard some
in
a safe harbor. You cannot
outward bound wagon or up or
have
your cake and eat it, too.
down country to some other
The
harbor
was either safe—or
Port. Main Street hospitality
it
was
unsafe;
and what ever
(with the accompaning copper
was
done
or
wasn't
done about
supervision) is of course respon­
shutting
the
steam
off
the main
sible to some extent but some­
engine,
cannot
alter
that
fact.
thing else must be wrong. Only
•The
ship
was
always
ready
to
today soliie Ave or six guys piled
move by the time she could have
off ships with barely enough
been un-moored. We could have
pay for bus fare to the next port
gotten
her to rolling by the time
and although the board was full
we
got
the lines in, of the an­
of jobs, they promptly took out.
chor
up;
whichever it might
Another bad factor is the oc­
have
been.
Furthermore: it is
casional "Bomb shy" guy that
not
necessary
for the Chief Engr.
discovers he doesn't like the car­
to
ask
anyone
except the Cap­
go after he has signed on and
tain
or
the
Ipcal
authorities
wants help to get off articles. A
about
whether
he
shall
shut the
regular flood of letters arrives
steam
off
the
main
engine
or
from draft-near sea career as­
not.
Shutting
the
steam
valve
pirants in the hinterland who
doesn't make the harbor safe,
now desire to serve their coun­
and opening it won't make it
try on the high seas. One aspir­
unsafe. It simply has nothing
ant was willing to do the union
to
do with it; so don't harp too
a favor of making a thirty day
long
and often on that jioint. It
trip if we could arrange to let
won't
get you anywhere. The
him work lashore for six moiiths
argument
about whether or not
after that trip so he could make
OrS.n
was
safe or unsafe, was
up with his wife.
PHILADELPHIA
settled
long
before this ship was
The RMO, USS, WSA, USMC,
built,'
and
the
best thing you can
and the rest of the bureaucrat
Well' here we go again doing do is be glad you are getting
alphabet are busy as usual but business at the siame old place.
are receiving little encourage­ Banvard of the Robin line in $5.00 a day and let it go at that;
otherwise you can, and' probably
ment around here.
last week. This ship was carry­ win, lose the whole works.
Beefs are becoming more difficult to settle through the WSA
MARTY TRAINOR, ing troops, so that put her in
and
most of Jack Hawk's correspondence receives the silent treat­
Agent the category of an army trans- I might also add that there is ment in Washington. The only letters he receives from Hubert
no such thing as double overtime
pnart, so her name for that trip —or if there is; nobody has ever Wyckoff are complaints about alleged lack of discipline aboaiti
was in reality the United States collected it, yet—and you won't SIU .ships.
TAMPA
Army Tr an.sport John Banvard either.
This is the general line, pursued by the WSA and was followed
Things around this port are (U-S-A-T). Naturally having a Be sensible: Don't try to get by Captain Macauley when he appeared before the NMU Conven­
tion. He knew it was safe to slander the men in the NMU, because
piclflng up a little. We have title like this the crew is subject rich in one trip!
Curran
would back him up. Macauley, no doubt, boycotted the
shipped quite a few men- to Sa­ to army rule, especially when
RICHilRD J. BORDEAUX,
SIU
Agents
Conference because he knew he would not receive a
vannah, Charleston and Wil­ the .ship happens to be in Oiran,
C5h. Eng.
very cordial reception for his anti-union line.
mington this past week. The South Africa.
As you can see this individual
Brandywine has been in and It seems that the chief en­ possesses a very high mentality,
AAA
have almost completed putting gineer aboard was a very lovely
just like the baby after each
fellow,
in
fact
the
entire
black
all SIU men aboard her.
To McKay . . . your friend Pop Eye wants to say Hello. Rob­
sentence sticks out his tongue at
1 had a run in with the Chief gang to a man fell madly in you. As you read the above bul­ ert Diamond, your son was in Headquarters trying to locate you.
Engineer the last trip. (He is love with him. This dignified letin you can analyze the man Contact us and we will forward you his address. Wallace Royial is
known las a 1st class Scab from personage bore tjie title of Mis­ that has written it, you can see now sailing from the West Coast as Third Mate. His friends in the
Bro. Wallace's report). It seenis ter (heavy on the Mister) Rich­ that ihe is very vindicitive. Yes, East wish him well.
^
that the M.E.B,A. in Galveston ard J. Bordeaux, Honorable you might even h^ave the im­
will npt supply any more En­ Chief Engineer (and he doesn't pression that the five dollars
gineers to that ship until he gets forget to let you know his title). per day and the one hundred
Harry Collins wishes to remind Thomson that his
oflf. Well, this is the pay off; one It seems that this gentleman is per cent bonus was coming out
classification
has been changed from 4H to 4F. Joe Penta foimd
very
handy
with
a
typewriter
as
of our men who was a flrenaan
of his pockets. Ope thing, that Aileen interesting company at the Woman's Republican Club the
he
had
a
typewritten
bulletin
on there gave the Chief three
really caught my eye was on the
days notice that he wanted to posted daily for their benefit. above bulletin he stated "be other night. Carroll Quinnt will soon be leaving for the' West
get off in Tampa. So on arrival One that was very interesting is sensible, don't try to get rich in Coast and his girl, Friday. Geo. Bunch and (Carroll gave the girls
a break from Reading, Pa. So Seari and Andy Bailey saw the pre­
tlie Chief told him that he as follows:
one trip." Can you imagine a view of "For Who the Bells Toll.
would put the FBI on him if he
June 23rd, 1943. guy^ getting ,the rnoney that he
quit.
S.S.I John Banvard
is getting telling a thing like called before the Mast and the formed the Captain of the ship
So on the day of arrival
that to a wiper!
charge is read to him by the in regards to the matter and he
NOTICE
"boarded her and he tells me the
Some
stuff
I
calls
it.
skipper
who in turn asks the became very indignant over the
same thing. I told him to go The first Asst. Engr. hgs been
ahead and notify all the gov­ annqy^ enough and has haid One of the highlights of this man in question what he has to whole affair. He wanted to know
ernment oflBcials as this man enough of his time taken lip bird's career was when one of say for himself. Whatever his who was the master of the ship.
hiad been sailing steady for the with iionsensical overtime the oilers went ashore and miss­ answer is, is put in the log the He stated that the oiler in ques­
past two years and had. been claims, ' recently, to make up ed a watch and when the oiler skipper generally has someone tion was a very good man and
torpedoed once and I thought more overtime than tire claimers came back the. Chief Engineer, there to witness the procedings he was personally going to de­
that if he would get off the of said overtiriie have worked without consulting the Captain, then the man is told that he is fend him in front of the Coast
Shallow water run and try the during the entire trip. In several complained to the Army officials logged (2) two days pay and he Guard and see that his certi­
deep sea for a while he would instances, two or three men are ashore and the oiler in question is given a written copy of the ficates were given back to the
change his mind. He stated that claiming overtime for the same was taken ashore and tried for charges. This procedure has oiler in que.stion. Well, there
the NMU never complained job at the same time. This is direct disobedience of orders and been adheared to in most cases isn't much more to say as things
about overtime or anything else. obviously silly, and unless you being absent without leave and for years, but low and behold are about normal around here.
Then I infornied him that the straighten it out among your­ was fined the neat little sum of this being an army transport Brothers Hodge, Gelak, Alleva,
SIU and the SUP had fought for selves, I shall, refuse ^to sign any seventy-five dollars.^ All this, and the chief engineer being and Do-the-Best - you-can-Hlllovertime and better wages and overtime slips whatever,, I am mind you, without the knowledge such a lovely personage, natur­ man. have all .shipped out on
conditions and that we lived up willing that a man should have of the Captain. So beware of ally he chose the method best the John Banvard. Shipping is
pretty good here, we are short of
to hur, union agreemept. and, everything that is coming to this type of man that would do suited to himself.
When the ship arrived in A.B. for the first time in four
that if he did, not like Union him, but he certainly can't have a trick like that. It might be
men or unipri ships to hit, the everything that is coming to that he dislikes the Union and Philadelphia, the Coast Guard months. Well here's to a bigger
dock as there was a union (ihief, him, and to everyone else, too. he may be trying to start trouble. intelli'gence officer came aboard and better union, steady as she
here on the beach that, would Tfie captain tells me that he The correct procedure in cases to investigate the man further, goes.
HARRY J. COLLINS,
more than fill his shock The Will positively resist any and all like this is when a man is not and after a lengthy discussion
Agent
deck delegate on there collected attem.pts to collect ovei^ttjme for aboard to stand his watch he is he lifted the man's papers. I in­

Out of the Focs^l
by

X.

- 'I'l 'Ar - ft'

t.1

�Page Four

THE SEAFARERS' LOG

Friday July 16, 1943

ACCEPTANCE OF RMO CARDS Curran Bankruptcy
Is Revealed At
NMU Convention

{(ymtinued from Page 1)
WHEREAS, these same politi­
cians have now openly stated
that no seaman will get defer­
ment iiniess his RIVIO eard is
sent to the RMO when he ships
out, and
WHEREAS, this phoney move
is just in line with, the unionbusting policy of this fink out­
fit called the RMO, and a move
to finger SUP and SIU men to
the Army because the SUP will
not take their finky
program
now, therefore be it
RESOLVED: That the SUP is
still utterly opposed to this finky
lash up, but for the protection
of our membership and union
take the following action:
NO. 1—CARD NO. 47.
When a member of the SUP
and SIU sign on board a ship,
let the clerk or skipper fill out
Card 47—and that we give them
the information necessary to fill
but these cards, but that we do
not sign them.
NO. 8-UARDS 48-A
WhCn a member-of the SUP
and SIU signs off a ship, he will
take care No. 43-A is filled out by
the clerk or skipper, (but not to
Sign It himself.)
Nb. 3.
IVhen a member of the SUP-SIU
ships out again, he gives his
48-A card to the dispatcher who
will then forward same to the
local RMO office. BUT HE DOES
NOT SIGN HIS NAME AS A
UNION OFFICIAL, nor the name
of the UNION. And be it finally
RESOLVED: That we publicize
this widely among our members.:
(Concured In By Coastwise
Membership.)

no real intention of fighting for
{Continued fram Page 1)
present a list of post war "de­ their realization.
mands." Even the hardened
PHONEY METHOD
Stalinists seemed embarrassed The NMU method makes im­
over the rankness of their sell­ possible the winning of any con­
out program, and decided to give cessions from the shipowners.
lip-service to wages and condi­ You can not, at one and the
tions.
same time, embrace labor-man­
The NMU demanded that the agement -government commitseamen receive, at some future tees as the sole means of strug­
date, the following benefits;
gle and expect to win wage in-(
1. The 40 hour week. This creases and job security. You
great, revolutionary demand by can not act as the finger man
the sui&gt;er-militants on 17th for the &gt; bosses and expect to
street is already a part of the lead the workers in struggle
SIU program. It was adopted against the bosses. A stool
by the SIU Agents Conference pigeon commands the respect of
held month before last. The neither ^the employer nor the
NMU now attempts to get on victim.
.the bandwagon before it is too
The seamen know from long
late.
and bitter experience .that the
2. Pensions for wounded and only way to get higher wages
disabled seamen. This demand and shorter hours is by con­
is pure fraud, and the records ducting relentless and uncomwill prove it. This spring when promising struggle aboard the
the SIU was fighting for pen­ ships and on the waterfront.
sions, the Maritime War Emer­
But to the Stalinists, "strike"
Cooperation of Navy and Coast Guard planes, blimp and ships
gency Board presented its 2nd is a horrid word. They have po
brought quick rescue for these merchant seamen after they were
war risk insurance policy which plans for imion struggle. They
torpedoed off the East Coast.
The dramatic scene was taken
actually decreased the benefits have, therefore, no plans for
from a Navy blimp which first sighted the survivors and dropped a
payable under its 1st policy. The winning better wages and con­
rubber life raft to them. The survivors landed in Miami, Florida.
NMU, contrary to what it js now ditions. To the principles of
preaching regarding life pen­ unionism, to the welfare of the
sions, introduced to the Mari­ seamen, they give lip-service
time War Emergency Board for and nothing else.
adoption a policy which was
USUAL FANFARE
nothing more than a compensa­
The convention was greeted
tion act calling for a ceiling of
$10,000 for total disability or loss with the fanfare of publicity
WASHINGTON — American of life. It was Dushane, SIU which usually surrounds NMU
workers in shipyards through­ Washington Representative, who projects. The capitalist press,
out the country built and deliv- demanded at this same meeting recognizing the fact that the
ed more ships in the first six that Congres be asked to pass NMU leaders are the bosses'
months of 1943 than were con­ legislation which would pension lieutenants, gave the clambake
disabled seamen lor life and in­ a real buiid-up. But the time
structed in all of 1942.
when the rank and file seamen
A new member of the SIU When he tried to get the NMU
With the'delivery of 168 cargo crease the death benefits. When could be sucked in by printers'
turned in a membership book in to take up his beefs, they told vessels totaling 1,676,500 dead­ the NMU now belatedly raises
the "Pan American Department him "we have no jurisdiction" weight tons in June, production SIU demands as its own, it re­ ink has passed. The seamen
of the NMU" and upon ques­ and the same delegate then pro­ of ships for the first half of 1943 veals its double bookkeeping. It have learned that there is no
tioning revealed that he had ceeded to tell the other members totaled 879 ships aggregating has a phoney militant line which relationship between what The
been forced into the crummy of the crew that they had to 8,818,622 deadweight tons. In it passes, out to the membership Pilot and New York Times writes
outfit by the NMU who had an sign up or get off. The major­ the entire year 1942 the yards when lyings get too hot, but: in and number of pork chops on
"agreement" with the operators. ity of the crew were Alien sea­ produced 746 vessels totaling 8,- ts back-door dealings in Wash­ the table.
ington it sells the men down the The seamen have learned that
When he joined he was told men.
089,732 deadweight tons.
hey have few real supporters in
river.
that he would enjoy full privil- The NMU used this to levy a
June construction brought
Washington
and that the way
Idges of a union member.
toll upon them without giving other new records in the record- 3. $250 monthly war risk
to
get
conditions
is not by cock­
On board the Panamanian them any representation.
breaking feats of the nation's bonus. Ah, their chickens come tail parties uptown, but by pick­
flag 'ship he found that his wages
lome to roost. $250 bonus is
shipbuilding industry.
were some twenty per cent be­ This is nothing more or less
what
the SIU struck for in the et lines on the waterfront.
low the American scale. Over­ than simple and plain crimping. A new record for ships deliv­ fall of 1941. Curran and com­
time was sixty cents an hour When a so-called union recog.,^ ered by an individual yard was pany finked on that strike and
and try and collect it. The food nizes two different wage scales set by AFL workers, when the called it "a bum beef." Now, two
was lousy and the crew was they have two standards. Thus California Shipbuilding Corpor­ years later, they raise the cry as
told that they were .subject to the NMU openly admits and ation sent 20 Liberty Ships Ihto if it were something new that
Panamanian laws which meant practices wage cutting within service compared with 18 deliv­ they had just thought up, No. Editor:
the industry.
Seafarers Log
ered in May and 19 in April.
that they were bound to the
the
SIU
didn't
get
a
$250
bonus
2 Stone Street
AFL
.workers
in
the
former
Who gets the piece-off from
ship, regardless of the duration
out of that strike, but it won an New York City
Richmond
Yards
No.
1
"and
2,
the
operators
and
how
much?.
of the voyage, for the term of
now merged into one yard oper­ mcrease, and has won several Dear Sir and Brother:
the articles.
—NORFOLK PATROLMAN
ated by the Shipbuilding Divis­ increases since — ail of which
I would like to congratulate
ion of the Permanente Metals were passed on to the NMU by
Corporation of California, turn­ the shipowners. The present the SIU men on the way you are
bonus rate is the direct and ex­ carrjring on the transportation
ed in a total of 25 Liberties.
clusive
result of the -SIU strug­ of arms and troops in all parts
Crew of SJB. Charles B. Aycock
Deck Department which made
As was announced last week
have $125 coming. Collect Miss- last voyage on S.S. George Gale in the Seafarers Log the major­ gle. Any future boosts will be of the world. The LOG reaches
l^ippi Shipping Company, 17 has overtime coming from Mississ­ ity of construction from now on due to the same cause, and not me regularly and gives me great
Battery Place, New York City. ippi Line.
will be of "Victory Ships" rather to any wind from Curran.
pleasure in reading the true
than the old "Liberty Ships." Curran and Company give lip- news of true men.
* * *
The new freighters will be cap­ service to these demands, but it
Oilers on last trip of S.S. Del
When my outfit crosses to
Entire Deck Department of S.S. able of 17 or 18 knots.
is only lip-service for they have comT)at duty, it's my prayer that
Norte have overtime coming. Col­
Josiah Parker has overtime due.
lect from Mississippi Line, 17 Bat­
the SIU men are at the helm to
Collect Mississippi Steamship Com­
tery Place, New York City.
steer
a good outfit safely to'the
pany, New Orleans.
ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
fight which we all share.
* * *
Crew S.S. John Stevens and S.S.
I can think of nothing more
JULY ITO 10
Deck
&amp;
Engine
Dept. S.S. Samuel
to say except keep up the good
Pan 'Giilf have attack bonus com­
^
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL work and remember what we are
ing. Collect Waterman Line, 19 Griffin having personel effects
claim see Robin Line claim agent,
fighting for.
Rector St., New York City.
SHIPPED
246
153
190
589
39 Cortland-St., N. Y. C.
• » &lt;
Sincerely yours,
;!
REGISTERED
183
201
97
504
Firemen on S.S. Richard Afvey Steward Dept. S.S. Broholt- Liv­
have overtime coming. Collect Bull ingston have overtime coming. Col­
Corp. H. R. KERN,
ON HAND ....... V
120'
86
318
lect Bull Line.
Line, New York City.
(A.B.)No.485

1942 Shipbuilding Total
Surpassed In Six Months
NMU Panamanian Division
Is Found To Be Phoney

Editors Mail

MONEY DUE

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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
CURRAN BANKRUPTCY IS REVEALED AT NMU CONVENTION&#13;
BRASS HAT SQUEEZE FORCES ACCEPTANCE OF RMO CARDS&#13;
DRAFT BOARD REFUSES TO RECLASSIFY STRIKERS&#13;
W.L.B. SETS UP MARITIME PANEL&#13;
GREEN CALLS FOR PURGE OF LABOR HATERS IN CONGRESS&#13;
RADIO PLAY SALUTES S.U.P MEN FOR UNUSUAL COURAGE&#13;
BELGIAN SEAMEN'S UNION MARKS GAIN IN NEW PACT&#13;
TO FIGHT AGAIN&#13;
CURRAN BANKRUPTCY IS REVEALED AT NMU CONVENTION&#13;
NMU PANAMANIAN DIVISION IS FOUND TO BE PHONEY&#13;
1942 SHIPBUILDING TOTAL SURPASSED IN SIX MONTHS&#13;
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^ARERSJocj
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
VOL. V.

:v

NEW YORK, N. Y., FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1943

No. 17

Here Are Two Case Histories For
GREEN DEMANDS PRICE R OLE Mister Wyckoff
BACK AT ONCE — OR ELSE!
DETROIT, July 19 — Charging
that the Government had failed
to hold the line against infla­
tion and that labor and con­
sumers were being discrimin­
ated against by Congress, Wil­
liam Green, president of the
American Federation of Labor,
declared in an address here to­
day that "unless prices of food
are brought down to a reason­
able level" organized labor will
have "no other recourse but to
demand wage increases."
He spoke before 700 delegates
to the natiorial convention of
the Brotherhood of Mainten­
ance of Way Employes and his
speech was applauded.
Delivering what was in effect

an utimatum to Gbverment
agencies having to do with wage
and price controls, he asserted
that "drastic action must be
taken at once.
"Our domestic war economy,"
he said, "has not been geared to
the need of protecting the work­
ers against the hazards of in­
flation and its concomittant
evils. Thi.s situation is becoming
more and more serious each
day. Profiteers and speculators
are sapping the strength of the
natioii's army of workers."
He declared that AFL surveys
showed that food prices had in­
creased from 50 to 200 per cent
since the beginning of the war

and demanded "intelligent and
orderly acton to assure workers
and their families of a decent
place to live in and enough
nourishing food to eat within
the reach of their income."
The Office of Price Adminis­
tration and the War Food Ad­
ministration, he asserted, had
"fallen down on the job" and in
Congress "the voices of special
interests "were dominant," to the
detriment of the consumers.
He warned Congress that "the
workers of America will not
stand for being starved out of
existence by war profiteers and
speculators."

&lt;1.

Froductivity of workers has luounted "phenomenally" in most war industries, but the gain
has gone chiefly to swell already exorbitant profits of the manufacturers, the A F of L. de­
clared this week.
"With their wages frozen, workers have received no wage raises commensurate with these
advances in production per man-hour," the A.F. of L. protested. "Instead, tlieir productivity
has greatly increased the profits of their companies."
"The increased productivity for which workers are not paid constitutes a tremendous war
sacrifice on their pari—a sacrifice that takes a permanent toll out of their work power," the
A. F. of L. asserted. "As their capital is their power to work, this unpaid labor is in reality a
capital levy imposed upon them."
7

The SIU receives a great deal of mail from Mr. Hubert
Wyckoff of the WSA—all of it concerning the alleged per­
forming of men aboard SIU ships. Every time we send him
a letter concerning a legitimate beef, he replies with another
case history of a performer.
There may be a few performers in the SIU, there are some in
every organization. But the WSA is attempting to exaggerate
their number and the seriousnes of their "crimes" as a weapon
against the union. While Wyckoff doesn't say it in so many words,
the implication of his corre.spondence is that SIU men are sab­
otaging the war effort.
This is a vile slander against union men who daily risk their
lives so that supplies may reach the war fronts. Hundreds of our
brothers have lost their lives at sea, hundreds more have been
permanently injured, and thousands have been torpedoed and set
adrift for days on end in open life boats—only to promptly ship
out again when reaching shore. No one can tarnish their record—
not even Hubert S. Wyckoff.
We're getting pretty fed up with Mr. Wyckoff's case histories,
and so we now submit a couple of our own. These stories were
written by rank and file members of our union and reveal how
the WSA's anti-union bias is communicated to some officers aboard
WSA ships and results in friction and inefficiency. These stories
show, also, that it is not always the unlicensed man who is the
performer.

By the Crew of the
S.S. Grace Abbott

By the Crew of the
S.S. John Bunvard

The Captain of our ship was
drunk from the time we left
New York until the day he was
taken off the ship at Capetown,
South Africa. He ordered the
lifeboats rigged in when we were
ordered back to Panama two
days south of Panama. The crew
protested to the delegates and
when they went to him they
were told that he would rig the
boats in when he got ready and
if he took a notion he could
keep the boats in all the time.
That same night he ordered
a fire- and boat drill at 9 o'clock.
In the course of holding the
drill he turned on all four of
the ship's flood lights, saying it
was alright as we were in safe
waters.
FIRST PETITION
When he arrived back in
Panama we turned in a petition
to the Naval Intelligence signed
by every membc: of the unli­
censed personel but one. We
were only in port six hours and
did not have time to get any
action on this.
After that, all four life rafts
were lashed at the top of the life
raft frame. The painters of the
rafts were let out and made fast
to the bulwark throughout the
whole trip until we arrived at
South Africa. In going around
the Cape the life boats were left
rigged out. The Captain said he
wanted them out and they would
stay. The Chief and 2nd Mate
both told him the seas were
pounding the boats, but he
would not rig them in. The two
boats on the port side were
washed in on deck and smashed
{Continued on Page 3)

We, the undersigned members
of the crew of the S.S. John
Banvard wish to take this
method to express ourselves, and
condemn the actions of the
Chief Engineer on this voyage.
This man seems to get satisfac­
tion out of creating friction be­
tween himself and members of
the crew and to set himself up
as a sort of dictator toward the
unlicensed men.
Before the ship arrived in
Gran, he called one fireman and
one oiler to his room and told
them that the port was under
martial law, to watch their steps
and not get into any trouble
with the shore authorities.
MILITARY POUCE USED
The fireman and oiler missed
their watches. After the fireman
had been back on board the ship
{Continued on Page 5)

-.U't.

• 'A.."..

A CORRECTION
In the July 9 issues of the
Seafarers Log, J. L. wrote in his
column "Out of the Focs'l" that
the Bull Line wss guilty of mis­
treating survivors of one of
their torpedoed ships. We find
now that the information upon
which J.L. ba.sed his comments
was inaccurate and the Bull
Line was not responsible for the
mistreatment accorded the men.
We hasten to make this correc­
tion of fact.
We should like to add that the
Bull Line has been outstanding­
ly fair in its treatment of tor­
pedoed seamen — a statement
which can be made for very few
shipowners.

�w
niffa Two

TBE SEAFARERS £6G

•,' "/. •^:'

vMMt, jmriSi,
m'

•SWTS

pom oi\

Pu^sbed by the

n,^ASHir\GTOIV

SEAFABEBS' INTERNAHOHAL UNICN
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Libor

HARRY LUNDEBERG

President

110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

Secy-Treas.

P.. O. Box 25, Station P., New York Gty
»

MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Rep.
424 Jth Street, N. VM Washington,' D. C.
w

'«

Wi

Directory of Branches
BRANCH

PHONE

ADDRESS

NEW YORK (I)

8 Stone St
Deck &amp; Engine Diejpatcher. . BOwlins Green 9-34S0
Stewnrd Oispatctier. .. ^. .BOwling Green 9-0786
Agent
poking Green 9-3437
BOSTON
330 Atlantic Ave
Llbertr 4057
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Gay St.
Calvert 4539
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St.
Eomhard 7651
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PL.'.
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS (*6) ... 309 Cbartres SL
Canal 3338
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay SL
Savannah 3-1728
TAMPA
423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St.. ...Dial 2-1392
PUERTO RICO
45 Ponce de Leon
Puerto de Tlorm
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
.....Galveston 2-8043
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway. Ft. Lauderdale 1601
www

Maritime If ur
Emergency Board:

PUBLICATION OFFICE:
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8346

You're A Hero —Brother
YES SIR SAILOR, YOU'RE A HERO,
THAT'S WHAT THE PAPERS SAYBUT YOUR RATING' 0ROP8 TO 2ER0,
WHEN YOU REQUEST MORE PAY.
YES SIR, YOU'RE A BRAVE GUY,
YOU'RE THE ONE WHO KEEPS 'EM SAILING;
BUT DESPITE HOW HARD YOU TRY,
STILL YOU'VE GOT ONE FAILING.
YOU BELONG TO A UNION BROTHER;
TO THE SUP OR SlU;
SO THE POLITIC08 CAN'T DO OTHER,
THAN TO KEEP THEIR EYES ON YOU.
BROTHER YOU'VE GOT A LOT OF FRIENDS,
THEY RUN THE W.S.A.
THEIR DESIRE TO HELP YOU HAS NO ENDS;
EXCEPT WHEN IT COMES TO PAY.
THEY'VE STRUCK OFF A BUNCH OF MEDALS BOYS,
AND A BUNCH OF LITTLE GREEN CARDS,
THEY'RE A GANG THAT REALLY ENJOY,
PROVING THEY'RE YOUR PARDS.
AND JUST TO PROVE IT, THEY'RE RECRUITING,
A QUARTER OF A MILLION MEN,
TO TAKE YOUR PLACE WHEN ITS "FINISHED
WITH SHOOTING,"
YOU GET YOUR ^TIME OFF" THEN.
SO DON'T TRY TO GET ANY SECURITY PAY,
FORGET ABOUT BONUS AND OVERTIME,
LET YOUR CONDITIONS FADE RAPIDLY AWAY,
THEY'RE FOR YOU ALL OF THE TIME.

'/irv

THE SHIPS WILL GO BACK TO THE OWNERS
SOME DAY,
AND YOU'LL GO BACK ON THE BEACH—
IF YOU TAKE THE GUFF OF THE W.S.A.
AND HEED THE CRAP THEY PREACH.

— Sfaw Bell —
ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
JULY im TO tm
DECK ENGINR STEWARD TOTAL

SmFFED

3»i

m

IM

671

REGlSTEBfP i...,tap

^5

6a

aSSi

84

6T

ksi

ON HAND:
•t

•

106

A. W- Armstrong, Agent, SIU, to do what the shipowners could
New Orleans: The WSA has no­ not accomplish, and using the
tified their agents in New Or­ old WAR baloney to put this
leans to pay the crew of the SS over? Is it the Longshoremen's
Abemathy transportation back compensation act, or something
to the Pacific Ckiasfc. Tbis Is one simiiiar to it.
of the vessels that was in dis­ If seamen agreed to some
pute last December and the
policy simlUar to the LongslioreWSA ruled tltat all vessel? of men's
compensation act that
the three compaifies inyo.lyed— will cover
seamen's disability or
Grace, Luckenbach, and Moore
death during the war, what ar­
MacOormack, that arrive back gument would the seamen have
on the Pacific CJoast are to be
the war in fighting any
considered under West Coa.st after
bill that may be presented to
contracts. This vessel has ar­
rived at a Paci^c Ckiast port congress along the s^me lines?
since the WSA made that ruling, It seems to me that the Board
so this vessel comes under the is making another attempt to go
SUP agreements, and the SIU beyond their jurisdiction, or is
agent in New Orleans should see using its influence to saddle the
that this crew is manned by seamen with some compensa­
men from the SIU haW. Watch tion act that is not hi the inter­
Grace line to see that they do est'of the seamen, and is enter­
not chisel.
ing a field wherein it has no
business, unless they are at last
coming out and showing their
true colors as not being an im­
partial board to settle disputes,
but are trying to saddle the sea­
men with laws that the ship­
owners were not capable of put­
ting across.

son who willed the states of Caiifomla, Oregon, and Wasifington to the SUP and SIU. It;
seems that they feel they must!
challenge the right of a claim,
then try and find out if there
was any claim, etc., right down
the line. And finally when ai
Claim is settled, the persons en­
titled to bonuses will have whi$H
kers longer than Mr. Pamell oI
the Holy Rollers.

War Shipping
Administration:

!l

The SIU committe that waa
elected at the conference to
come to Washington was notin
fied by a representative of the
WSA that the WSA had what
they called Plan No. 10, fof Ll^
erty ships. This Instructed the
ship yards to bring the after
deck house forward nearly to thfl
winches, and to extend the deck
house amidships on the skippefs
deck, so that two other rooms
would be added. This plan was
held up for some alterations
Have been advised that the shiip
yards can now go full speed/
ahead with Plan No, 10.

J. H. Volpin, Patrolman, SIU,
NY:SS B, H. Lee—Board has
ruled that there was an enemy
attack in Algiers on March 28,
1943, and If the ship was there
at that date crew is entitled to Believe that it is about time
attack bonus of $125.00. S.S. that the unions notify the board Atlantic Fishermen*s
Panama City—^Board is chcck= once and for all to stay within Union (SIU):
'
ing for further inforifiation. Pa- their jurisdiction, and keep the
The CPA set ceiling prices oni
j'olman Sweeney, S.S. G. Galo— hell out of seamen's interest
what the fishermen are to re­
Same as S.S.
Oity» S.S. E. that they have no concern with.
ceive on the New England Coast,
Nott—Sanje status.
Stay to their job of settling dis­ The fishermen feel that through'
Members of the MWEB on putes on bonuses and war risk
June 16^ 1943 sent a letter to insurance, and I can state right this order their wages that they
received in 1942 lare being low­
Admiral Land regarding in.sur- now that their decisions are not
ered.
To date there are over 100
ance for seamen. Copies of this at tail favorable or fair in any
fi.shing
boats that have not left
letter have been sent to the .sense of the past practices that
port,
as
the fishermen are
maritime unions for their com­ existed in the industiy prior to
fusing
to
saU them under the
ments.
their being appointed by the
OPA ceiling prices. Some more
In this letter the Board, states President. If they have in mind
Washington boondongling b y
hat all vesse^ ighd their cargoes making this War time insur­
the
superior minded chairwanhare fully protected against any ance along the lines; of the pres­
ers.
marine peril. The^ board feels ent 2nd seamen's war risk in­
that seamen should also be proT surance, or their bonus decis­ The OPA dug away back $0
tec ted, regardless of the cause ions, they can stick the whole the time when the fisherm^
which results''in the loss of life proposition 'down the scuppers. were working for pretzels, and
or disability.
My advice to the union is for used that scale of wiages (which,
The Board has suggested that all the. branches to hold meet­ was practically nil) and what
the WSA should bake steps, as a ings on this subject and notify they could make under the new
wartime measure, to provide the Board in very strong langu­ regulations of their ceiling
death and disability insurance age what the members feel on prices as their basis for what
to cover industrial risks.
this proposed ,War Time insur­ they termed good wages. But
ance. Let's not lose sight of the they forget to mention that the
Under the Jones Act seamen faet that the seamen are the
scale of wages that they used
are protected, and have the only workers who have the
right to sue tlje employer for rights that are guaranteed them were in effect at the time when
the fishermen were not prganany disabilit;y or death incurred under the: Jones Act.
iMd. Under the stabilization or­
due to Industrial accidents. TTie
der they are not supposed to
board ciaims that there are Ed. Coester, Agent, SUP, Se­
lower wages that were received
some cases where a seaman attle: Letter to the Board of
in September of 1942. They ora
would not be fully covered.
June 17, 1943, regarding crews
using the old roll ba/ck baloney
of the vessels who were at Mas­
It seems to me that before the sacre Bay and Attu —Board to try and put their new regu­
unions can fully go along with finally was notified by the lations over. They have failed
any new insurance proposition, Army and Navy that there were to set a ceiling price on the re­
the Board or the WSA should attacks while the campaign was tailing price? that the magketa
send a draflf of any proposed in­ going on around May*22-23 and sell their fish. The only ones th^
are being kicked in the pants pn
surance to the miions. Certain­ 24th.'
the roll back are the fishermen.
ly no man with any sense would
Possibly
some of the OPA ofiBgo to a country fair and, just buy
Board wants the names of the
a horse. If he knew what he was vessels that were, there when cials are thhifcing of going fish­
doing he would give the horse a I there were attacks and the dates ing when they get the skids. One
thorough overhauling before the that the crews claim there was of their ex-regulators that they
sale is completed. Yet the boayd an attack made. All members had here in Washington is now
wants the union to comment on who were on board vessels driving a taxi here. He is; pi^?a .letter that has no. .defljjite iarour\d this time are notified to sibly the bird who lationed gas­
proposals on what a seaman is send in all the particulars into oline .so that the taxi would have
to receive in the forms of bene­ the Seattle Agent so that he can to go out of business, and he
moved into the picture. Sueh is
fits, ojr what the cost of this, in­ reshape these claims.
life here when you have -the
surance shall he.
The method ^opted by the power to make regulations. Big
The letter states that this hi- Board in settfin# these, claims, shot one day and taxi driver" the
surance shall be a WAB TEM® one would thinfc that they were next. Of such men is our Wash­
AffiASUBl?. Is the Board trying handling the estate of some per- ington bureaucr-aey composed.

�f:.

Vm'A:

T 9 a 8 E AJ? A B E R 8 L O G

•I

tcatj'.. I..-!

Mister Wyekoff
{Continued from Page 1)

John Banvard
tcfi; 13 hours and was getting
ready to go to work the next
toy, the Chief, without contact­
ing him to find out what was the
trouble, had him taken off the
ship at riflepoint by M.P. Anped
Guards, as if he was some des­
perate criminal. He had the
oiler also put in jail as soon as
he came aboard. They were both
held in the Army Guardhouse
from May 22nd until May 25th.

1

{Continued front- Page 1)

S,S, Gmee Abbott
and the davits were broken and
twisted. The forward boat on
the starboard side had the for­
ward falls carried away and we
almost lost it. There was not
any notice posted as to where
the men in those boats were to
go in case anything happened.
SEOP CHEST EMPTY

'3-

WHArS POtNO

Around the Ports
NEW ORLEANS
What I see by the papers is
enough to make any one roll
over in his grave. The RMO puts
full page ads in the local papers
to plead for more and more men
to enroll under the merchant
marine banner. At the same
time we have more and more
local boards issuing orders to
bon fide seamen that they can
not leave the country as they

must stand by to be inducted
into the army. Does this make
sense?
In NcTmreek of July 12, 1943
in the periscope it states that
there is a lengthy debate going
on as to the type vessel we
should build. Some flaim the
Victory type as they have more
speed, some claim the Liberty
type as they can be built faster.
In the same magazine in the
foreign section they devote two
pages to outlining England's
program after the war. England,
through her spokesman, issues
figures and facts to show what
she intends to do. First and fore­
most is her intention to raise
her export trade. Naturally she
will do this in her own bottoms.
And for the interest of those
who»should be interested, her
Empire ships are built for 14
knots, our Libertys for a fast
nine or slow ten. Our Victory
ships are supposed to be built
for 14 also. If they build these
ships we have a chance of com­
peting with the English vessels.
But i^ they make the usual mis­
take then, my buckos, all the
late seamen that we are now
getting will have a chance too
—the same chance that we had
after the last war. Loaded ships

out. In balla.st back, ships tletf?
up in every channel where there
was room. American, seamen
laid on the beach begging foe
ships to sail on. The Govern­
ment paid and paid subsidy af­
ter subsidy for what? So that
we could again'1)^ out millions
of dollars so that the lawmakers
could again sit back and argue
the type of vesel which would
be outmoded first so that once
again we could have the same
sort of set-up. If the brains that
are supposed to run this country
of ours can't leam by experience
then it is time to start anew.
The WSA is still on the beam.
We have a beef to collect trans­
portation on practically all ships
but the RMO can recruit men aa
far away as San Juan.
Everything is lovely though^
the war effort is in the bag. My
wife can't get a pound of butter
without a letter from FJDJ?.
Eggs were just raised two cents
a dozen wholesale here. There
just is no beef, but the papers,
came out with big headlines
CABBAGE AND LETTUCE
PRICES ROLLE5D BACK, and my
babies don't like either one.
Who is crazy besides me?
ARMY, Agent

There was no heavy clothing
in the slop chest except a few
suits of heavy underwear, a few
NO CHARGES
heavy socks and some watch
, They tried to N find out what caps. That was our heavy cloth­
charges were filed against them ing to go 75 miles south of Cape The Captain left his brief case
but the officials told them that Horn in December.
with our pay lying in the bot­
all that they knew was that the
tom of the boat. The clerk and
When we arrived in Capetown the Ensign had been fighting in
Chief had told them to come
the
Captain made the statement the boat and they were both
aboard and arrest these men.
On Monday they were taken be­ that he was not going to stay pretty well marked up.
fore an Army Officer and fined long enough to have repairs
OVERTIME CHISEL
$75.00 each. Then the Chief tried made. The Inspectors came
to have the men paid off and aboard and took pictures of the
left in Oran. When he found out damage and the result was that ; The Captain let the mates
he couldn't do this he told the we stayed in Capetown 0 days. stand all night watches in the
Persian Gulf at $1.15 an hour
men that if they caused any
While in Capetown we put in before they would give it to the
trouble at all he would have a second petition, which we gave
them put in irons on the way to the American counsul. The crew at 90 cents an hour. They
hired a shore gang at 30c a day
back to the States.
Chief mate also put in a com­ to tend lines while we were in
The fact is the men had never plaint about the same things we at the dock. If any gear broke
caused him any trouble at all petitioned for. The counsul told or parted, the mate§ would
and he was always treated with the officers to try and stick it break out a man or two to fix it
the respect that was due him. out so as to get the cargo to the as they would not dirty their
Of course, the men were guilty Persian Gulf as it would take pretty Maritime Commission
of missing their watches, but weeks to have the Captain taken uniforms.
, things like that can happen to off as the whole thng had to go
It was at this time that our
anybody. If he had logged the, to Washington.
food gave out completely as the
men as much as he was allowed
CALLED "AGITATOR"
Captain would not allow the
there would have been no
Steward
to take more than
squawks. But to wait almost 14 We left Capetown the. 12th of
the benefits achieved by mem­
days'
stores
in Capetown. They "FREE RIDERS"
hours when the men are going Jan. The Captain then called
There's
one
in
every
organiza­
bers over a period of years.
bought vegetables in Iran that
to work and having them jerked the deck delegate to his room
tion.
You
know
whom
we
mean
Ask the man next to you if he
gave the crew dysentary. The
off the ship, is going a little to and accused him of being an ag­
—the
fellow
who
dccepts
all
the
has
joined the union yet. Ask
meat that came aboard was not
far, we think. All this was done itator and of being the one who
benefits,
services
and
privileges
to
see
his paid-up dues book.
fit to be used. There were car­
without the Captain's knowl­ drew up the petition. He told
without
a.s.sauming
any
of
the
Tell
him
that it was not so long,
casses of sheep that had not had
edge. He didn't learn of it until him that he was going to turn
responsibilities
and
obligations.
ago
that
you worked 12 hours a
him over to Naval Intelligence the entrails removed. * We had Unions have them. The Team­ day for half the pay you are
he came back aboard.
when we went up the Indian butter that you could not stay sters have them.
now receiving, and that there
in the same messroom with. The
PROVOCATIONS
Ocean.
In
these
days
when
manpower
was no overtime and no vaca­
milk was diluted with 5 parts of
Also this Chief had a habit of
The Captain was di'unk and water and the coffee was com­ turnover is so great there are tions, Tell him that in those
sticking nasty notices all over went up and down the mess- pletely gone. The- Ensign got drivers , and dockworkers who days the boss could fire you if
the dtew's mess room until it room ringing the ship's dinner some toilet paper for the gun are trying to get a free ride at you looked at him the wrong
looked like a bulletin board in bell and hollering that it was a crew, but it was five days before the expense of their fellow way.
some news room. Several days general alarm.
Tell him that it was only
we received a couple of rolls. In workers. These free riders just
don't
seem
to
get
down
to
the
before arrival he had all the
through
a strong union that
the mean time we had been us­
those conditions were done away
water shut off from the crew's While laying at anchor in the ing up the ship's library. When union hall to pay their dues.
bath and made them use buck­ Persian Gulf the motor life boat we arrived at East London, Perhaps it is indifference. with.
ets, pLnchhoses and salt water. was used by the Captain as a South Africa, there was about 1 More likely it is ignorance — In order to keep our unionsThis was all right but he refused regular excursion boat. The dozen cans of dry stores left in ignorance of the sacrifice and strong, everyone must bear hia
toil and suffering that made the fair share of the obligations and
to cut water off for his own use Captam and a few of the officers the store room.
fine conditions under which responsibilities of organization.
or the other licensed men. If made repeated trips to a Greek
ship and would take American
they work. Nor do they And in order to maintain our
BLABBER MOUTH
we were running short of water cigarettes over and bring back
realize that to keep those work­ high working standards, it ia
it should have been cut off every wine, gin and whiskey.
When we arrived in East Lon­ ing conditions the union must imperative that we keep them
don the Captain bragged about remain strong, for employers are strong.
where and rationed if necessary.
the trip v/e had just made, he ever on the alert for an advan­ Es the man next to you a free
PHONEY UNIONISM
Finally, a few days before we
gave the name of the ship, port tage to wreck the organization rider?
One day the Captain came in­ of depaipture, port of dischiarge
came in port they were turned
—The Ohio- Teamster
to the crews' mess and threw a and nature of cargo, also for and eventually do away with
on again. The.se and numerous picket card .ron the table and
other things causes lack of co­ wanted all hands to read it so whom consigned. The Ensign
had a nervous breakdown after
operation betwe^ officers and they could see he was no fink. talking to some survivors who
men. After all, we are human But he was continuously brag­ were in port aboard the Robin
beings and don't like to be treat­ ging about his service with the Tuxford. He had to be removed
Swayne &amp; Hoyt outfit (a com­
ed like a bunch of cattle or pany that all good union men under armed guard. The Capbain and the 2nd mate were also
sheep because some one tries to know well).
removed under armed guard.
use their authority a little too
Lou Musial has been trying to get out of the Army and all our
On the 24th of February the The authorities; then ^ut a
much for their own advantage.
Captain, the clerk and the En­ Captaip aboard: that had been letters are not doing much for him. He is stationed at Camp Hale
Shore liberty was stopped for sign in charge of the gun, crew sailing as 2nd, mate on one of the with the Ski troops. He says Hello to Mike Davis and the rest of
the merchant crew but was went to the Agent's office to get Liberty ships that was in the the boys and wishes he could be with them.' Pete Rydzewski ia
soon to be a pappy. He and his wife are now living in New York.
money for a draw. When they harbor at the time.
given to the Navy crew about 4
Good
luck, Pete.
returned the bosun from.; an­
diays before sailing. If you went other ship had to. bring them On July 7th. at sea volunteers
Frank Gambicki is back from Hot Springs, He says his arm.
to, the Captain ho said-, go to the back in the boat as they were were asked for to paint the main feels, better opd h© hopes to. be back ayt sea soon. His friend:
Mate or Chief Eng. They would too drunk to handle it. Thpre deck. As the ship was going into yieras ha-s, ah^eody shipped. Joe Niowicki spent a week at Hot
know nothing, just keep you go­ was broken glass and rations drydock and it was only 2 days Springs, a^id says all SCU men should go there. The treatment
from the emergency rations before apriyalv apd- sffice all would, 49 them a wpijld of good. Mike (Don Juan) Rossi and the
ing from one to the. other- Ry.eiiy
scattered all oyer the .^at. The hands were beginning to, get ail­ Greek returned from a four month voyage with animals of all
thing was so confusing that; you rations were all spoiled.. The ments fromt continuous: wiatch sorts from. South America. Mickey Quinn wrote us from Gladdidn't knosT which of the. three three of them had to-be hoisted standing, o^. ope oyectimewould; like to have scnne of the brothers to write
him
as
he
says
its
lonely u), IJiosA Jersey woods.
hungfy
0.8.
volunteered.
aboqrd:
with
a.
line
aroun&lt;jl
them,
.
th« Master.

y/tom. Jhe,

(pMiA.—

Out of the Foesl
by

'^:&gt;r

�Page Four

Friday, July 23, 1943

THE SEAFAREBS L aG

ifih
'H r :'

Joe Curran And The
"American Way Of Life

TlTsunaJdam

WASHIINIGTON, July 21-^ohn
L. Lewis and his United Mine
Workers of America split the
The recent NMU convention adopted a resolution which
ranks of the country's bitumin­
described John L, Lewis, President of the United Mine
ous coal producers today by
Workers, as "an enemy promoting a program designed to
signing a seperate agreement
destroy the American way of life."
with the Illinois Coal Operators
Association, calling for portalJust what is this "American way of life" which Curran
to-portal pay, denied by the Na&amp; Company are defending against the "seditious" John L.
ti'onal War Labor Board in the
Lewis? It is, of course, different things to different people.
Appalachian fields,
and other
To the mine owners and the shipowners and the mill
concessions to increase weekly
and factory owners, it is the "right" J;o capriciously hire
pay materially without raising
and fire workers at will, to pay them slave wages and work
basic
hourly wage rates. About
them long hours, and from their productiveness to amass
30,500
miners are employed in
great personal fortunes.
the
Illinois
fields.
To the workers the "American way of life" most cer­
Under
the
agreement there is
tainly must include job security and the right to protect
to
be
a
two-year
no-strike con­
their living standards through strike action.
tract, with the seven-hour work
During the recent coal strikes it was clear where John
day at the mine "face" increased
L. Lewis and the miners stood in regard to these two con­
to eight, with time-and-a-half
ceptions of "Americanism." It was equally clear just where
overtime paid for the eighth
the mine owners and bankers and newspaper publishers
hour, and payment of all vaca­
stood.
tion and other benefits allowed
It is now also clear where the Stalinists in the NMU
by the WLB in the Appalachian
stand.
area.
Portal-to-portal pay, for travel
between the mine entrance and
the "face," would be accepted
by the operators as having been
in effect and unpaid since Oct.
24, 1938, when the Fair Labor
The following men have dis­
Standards Act went into opera­
charge papers in the office of
A new type combination boat tion, and would be paid, to the
the Secretary-Treasurer in New
extent of 50 per cent, up to
York: HERBERT M. CLARK, and raft. Intended for use on April 1, last, after which date it
AXEL V, HAGSLEN, HAROLD all ocean going vessels, has been would be met in full for the dur­
SANDER-SON, JOHN M. STEW­ designed and is how in produc­ ation of the contract.
ART and CHARLES H. WISNER.
tion, the Globe American Cor­ Coal Rise Is Asked to Pay Costs
«•
*
Having signed the agreement,
The following men have pa­ poration has announced from its the operators sent it to the "WLB
pers, receipts or books in the headquarters at Kokomo, Ind. for its approval and for collater­
New Orleans Hall: STANLON The lall-steel, non-inflammable al action by the Office of Price
GRICE, E. E. FLETCHER, HOW­ raft, known as the Kokomo Life- Administration to permit ad­
ARD GRAY, CECIL BRITT,
Saving Kraft, can be catapulted vances in maximum prices suf­
DONALD E. BLOOM, LYI.ES
ficient to cover the increased
FOWLER, EUGENE CARBART, from the deck of a sinking ves­
costs to the coal producers that
HUBERT DOUGLAS, THOMAS sel, a feature which is a decided
would result.
DEAR and HELMER PETERSON. advantage in cases where ves­
Doubt was expresesd at WLB
tire
sels are so badly damaged that headquarters that the board
CARVILLE COUNCILMAN:
they sink before the launching would give approval to all of the
Get in touch with the Mary­
provisions of the agreement, al­
land Minute Men at Diindalk, of a life boat is possible, it was
though it was predicted unoffi­
said.
Md.
Crew of S.S. Matt Ransome
cially
some might be allowed. It
Explosive bonus is payable to
X
»
•
»
Reversible and self-bailing the was recalled that in the Appala­ HE'S 3 days subsistence and
crew of S.S. John Riddle. Collect
LOUIS P., BERNICK, Jr.;
craft has water-tight stowage chian case the board, in declin­ transportation money coming. Wright &amp; Pugh, Kaiser Bldg.,
Your passport has been found
compartments available on ing to grant portal-to-portal Collect Smith &amp; Johnson, 80 Baltimore. Also, overtime for
and is in Room 213, 2 Stone
Deck Department is collectable
either side, which contain full, pay, suggested .that this issue Broad Street, New York City.
. Street, New York City.'
might
be
resolved
either
by
ne­
in
New York office of Seas Ship­
»
*
life boat equipment, contrasting
gotiation or by court test.
ping Company, 39 Courtland St.
Bosun
of
:
S.S.
Matt
Ransome
. ..The following men have the with the comparatively meager
UMW spokesmen said they has 97 hours overtime coming.
»
»
»
wrong numbers stamped in their supplies with which present type
preferred negotioian. Meanwhile See Patrolman Hart, Room 502,
Crew of SJ5. Charles B. Aycock
books. They should stop in the
rafts are furnished, it was as­ however, the Southern Appala­ 2 Stone Street, New York City.
have $125 coming. Collect Miss­
office of the Secretary-Treasurer
chian Coal Operators were
* * *
issippi Shipping Company, 17
and have them corrected. PHIL­ serted.
studying the possibility of legal
Following
Steward
Depart­
Battery
Place, New York City.
IP POSSIN, WILLIAM KANEY,
Protection for Occupanfjs
&lt;
action to determine whether the ment men have money coming
WILLIAM F. HOYT, MARSHALL
* * »
miners
had
a
legal
claim
to
un­
from
the
last
trip
on
the
S..
S.
The outstanding feature of
Oilers on last trip of S.S. Del
GEVIR, IRVING COLLMAN,
derground travel pay.
Josiah Bartlett:
the new type raft lies in the . Mr. Lewis will meet again with
Norte
have overtime coming. Col­
HUGH O'DONNELL, DAVID C.
KARL KARLSON—$2.53
protection it provides for its oc­ the UMW's 200-member policy
lect
from
Mississippi Line, 17 Bat­
JAMES WEST—$2.53
WALKINS, DONALD L A I N E ,
tery
Place,
New York City.
cupants. Where the present committee tomorrow to plan
JAMES BATTLE—$2.53
THOMAS KEMPHUR, CHARLES
• » •
• '* »
raft floats
practically awash, further strategy in the contro­
PUCKETT, NORMAN CHENEversy
Involving
the
Administra­
VERNON
WALDRON
has
Craw
S.S.
John
Steven, and S.S.
with ^urvivors swept by waves
VERT, PETER FAY, GEORGE
tion, the union and the other $60:91 coming from the last trip Pan Gulf have attack bonus com­
ROBINSON, NATHAN M.^SHEI- and exposed to winds and the operators. Meanwhile-, negotia­ on the S.S. Madison.
ing. Collect Waterman Line, 19
OFF, FRANK GAGES, JOHN sun, the hew raft lies high in tions between the UMW and the
Rectcr St.,, New York City.
ULAS, THOMAS LANDRY, CU­ the water and is equipped with anthracite operators, which have
EUGENE BRUNDAGE has
*
*
K
PID W. ROBERTS.
a completely enclosed canopy. not been carried to the WLB, $174.62 coming from the last trip
Firemen on S.S. Richard Alvey
»
•
•
on the S.S. Madison.
Ma.st, sails and rudder are p"ro- will continue.
have overtime coming. Collect Bull
MORRIS ROSENBERG:
t
*
*
Lino, New York City.
vided for navigation, blankets
Your book has been found and
Crew of S.S. Richard Bassett
Deck Department which made
and a heating stove for warmth,
which made voyage No.. 1 to last voyage on S.S. George Gale
is in the office of the Secretarynight and daylight signaling de­
Murmansk, has the Russian ha. overtime coming from Mis.i..Treasurer.
vices and many other articles
bonus ccming. Collect at Amtorg -ippj
necessary to meet emergencies
SIMQN HENRY FOKGETTE:
Trading Company, 210 Madison
*
»
»
Ave., New York City.
Your union book, Australian' which arise. After examining
Entire Deck Department of S.S.
a model of the, craft, which was
registration and assorted papers
designed by the company after
Deck Department of S.S. Grace Josiah Parker has overtime due.
JOHN JUREY
are in the Norfolk SIU Hall.
dozens of survivors had testified
Abbott has overtime coming. Collect Mississippi Steamship Com­
ANTHONY J. DURKE
to
the
undesirable
features
of
Collect Cahnar Line office in pany, New Orleans.
TED ZACK
J. H. WHITEFIELD
New York.
C. A THORNASON
Picket cards, photographs and the present type of wood raft,
* * •
.
the'two seamen stated they were
Deck &amp; Engine Dept. S.S. Samuel
MATTHEW PURGATOVIO
: papers are in Norfolk SlU Hall. of the opinion the life-saving
D. Carpenter and H. Roger,s: Griffin having personal effects
EDWARD E. CLARK
raft would alleviate much of the
Overtime coming from the South claim see Robin Line claim agent,
GERALD H. SMITH
A. MICHLEAU
Atlantic Line office in Savannah.
Cortland St., N. Y. C.
WIIJIAM J. COFFEY
Your shirts were removed from suffering now, undergone by sur­
»
•
»
vivors of torpedoed ships and
»
»
e
WILLIAM PATRICK
the S.S. Dynastic and are now in
would be instrumental in bring­
Oilers on 8-12 and 12-4
Steward Dept. S.S. Broholt LlvRALPH E. ALFORD - *
the New York halt Please call ing back hundreds of sailors who
JOSEPH YARNATZ
Watches on S.S. John Hillard ingston have overtime coming. Cdlwould otherwise die at sea.
for them.
have disputed overtitne coming, lect Bull Line.
WILLIAM P. KLEIN

sxscnms

/•ir.

MINERS WIN
PORTAL DISPUTE

NEW RAFT IS
SEEN AS GREAT
IMPROVEMENT
OVER OLD ONES

ARBEITER, JAAN
FOW
BLACK, ROBERT
^
Oiler
CARPENTER, ROBERT
OilS:
CARROLL, REUBAN
._
CooK
CIPOLLONE, DOMENIC „.
OS
COMBS, ROBERT
Wiper
CURMA, GEORGE
Oiler
ENGELBRETSON, WILLIAM „
Wiper
FINCH, EUGENE
AB
GONYA, LEO
Deck Engr.
GWALTNEY, WARREN
OS
HALE, JAMES
Messman
LEHR, KENNETH
•Bosun
McGUINNIS, MERLE - :
Messman
NILSSON, KARL
AB
OLSON, KENNETH
...
OS
OLSZEWSKI, JOHN
- OS
PERKINS, DWIGHT .
•
OS
PROCTOR, JOSEPH
steward
RAY, LOUIS
OS
REDDEN, ORVILLE
1
Messman
ROSS, CARL
Messman
SALUS, LOUIS
STOKES, MELVIN
FOW
WHITE, EARL
^
Utility
WISNIEWSKI, EDWARD ;
OS

&gt;»'«•
•» »

MONEY DUE

»•

i:.;
I'A- •

y: .

Ih • •

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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
HERE ARE TWO CASE HISTORIES FOR MISTER WYCKOFF&#13;
GREEN DEMANDS PRICE ROLL BACK AT ONCE -- OR ELSE&#13;
YOU'RE A HERO -- BROTHER&#13;
JOE CURRAN AND THE "AMERICAN WAY OF LIFE"&#13;
NEW RAFT IS SEEN AS GREAT IMPROVEMENTS OVER OLD ONES&#13;
MINERS WIN PORTAL DISPUTE</text>
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C;
I
I •'%'

I-:

OFFICIAL OBOAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTBICT.
^ SEAFABEB8' INTEBNATIONAL UNION OF NOBTH AMEBICA
VOL. V.

w

NEW YORK, N. Y., FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1943

No. 18

MWEB Again SHIPOWNER FRAMES-UP
Oversteps
'NEW ENGLAND' SEAMEN
Authority
New Withholding Tax Company Foments Strike
On Wages Explained To Jeopardize W.L.B. Case

The Maritime War Emergency
Board is again trying to extend
its jurisdiction to the field of
compensation and general wel­
fare of the seamen—a move be­
ing fought by the SIU-SUP.
The MWEB was established at
the time of the big bonus beef
in 1941, and its sole function is
the settlement of disputes be­
tween the unions and operators
over bonus and war risk insur­
ance rates. Since its establish­
ment, however, it has conduct­
ed an almost constant campaign
to extend its jurisdiction and
authority.
The correspondence printed
below is self-explanitory and re­
veals the latest MWEB maneuver
in this direction.
Maritime War Emergency Board
Washington, D. C.
June 17, 1943
TO THE PARTIES SIGNATORY
TO TME STATEMENT OP
PRINCIPLES:
Attached is a copy of a letter
which the Maritime War Emer­
gency Board addressed to the
Administrator, War Shipping
Administration.
Should the Parties Signatory
care to comment on the subject
outlined in the letter, it is sug­
gested that all comments be ad­
dressed to the Administrator,
War Shipping Administration,
Washington, D. C.
ERICH NIELSON,
Secretary
Maritime War Emergency Board
Washington, D. C.
June 16, 1943
Admiral E. S. Land
Administrator
War Shipping Administration
Washington, D. C.
Dear Admiral Land:
The Maritime War Emergency
Board has examined the ques­
tion of insurance for seamen in
the light of recent decisions and
the action taken by the War
Shipping Administration for the
purpose of carrying put the
same. The Board recognizes
that these decisions and the ac­
tion which you have taken in
conjuction therewith virtqally
exhaust the .field of life and dis­
ability insurance for seamen le­
gally open to the Board and the
War Shipping Administration.
The Board has been advised
that there exists a large field of
operating and industrial risks
lying beyond the Decision lA as
, Amended. Methods of operation
' of vessels during war times in
such fields as loading and dis­
charging create conditions which
it is believed materially increase
the chances of industrial acci­
dents. While under certaha cir­
cumstances the seamen might
recover under the Jones Act on
negligence theories, cases will
{Continued on Page 4)

By Theodore Thomson

From the 1st of July all seamen will have 20% "pay as you go"
tax withheld from their monthly pay.
If you are single you have a monthly basic exemption of $52before your income is taxed. If you are married your exemption is
$104, and if married and have one child (or another dependent)
your exemption is $130.00.
You also receive exemptions for additional portions. of a
month, as follows: for each day over the 30 day exemption you are
allowed $1.70 if single, $^.50 if married and 85 cents per day for
each additional dependent.
Suppose you are out for 3 months and 16 days. If single your
exemption would run as follows:
3 months at $52.00
.$156.00
16 days at $1.70
27.20
Total exemption
$183.20
If your total wages, overtime and bonus amount to $735.00 you
would then deduct your exemption of $183.20, and find that $551.80
is the amount taxable. 20% of your taxable income ($551.80) would
be $110.36. Deduct this from your total earnings.
Total earnings
$735.00
20% deduction of taxable portion
110.36
To determine Federal Old Age Benefit, robnjr'ahd board allow­
ance must be added at the rate of $36 per month, or $1.20 per day.
Thus, 3 months and 16 days @ $1.20 is $127.20, add thi.s to your
earnings of $735.00
127.20
862.20 1% of which is $8.62, so your final computa­
tion would be as follows:
Total Earnings
$735.00
"Pay as you go" tax
110.36
Social Security Tax
Net Wages

,

. $624.64
8.62
$616.02

The SIU was the victim of a huge frame-up this past
week-end, a frame-up designed to jeopardize the union's
case before the War Labor Board in which a boost of pay
was being demanded for the men of the New England
Steamship Line.
A wildcat strike broke out on
the
SS. Martha's Vineyard on
Canteen Moves
July 25, tying the boat up long
July 21, 1943 enough to miss its morning run
on July 26 between New Bedford,
Editor, Seafarers Log,
Mass., and the Island, and long
2'Stone Street,
enough to give an opportimity
Room 213, New York
for the Army, Navy and 'War
Please post this notice on Labor Board to descend upon
your bulletin board, Spivys the port and threaten all sorts
original Merchant Marine of dire consequences to the men
Canteen will move to a new and the union. In a telegram
air-bonditiohed. room Tues­ written by a Boston War Labor
Board official, the direct threat
day, July 27, 1943. This is the
canteen that opened one was made that tlie Board might
rule against the union on its
year ago at the George
I&gt;ending case involving the New
Washington Hotel, then
moved to the Ritz Tower. Ekigland men, because of the
Now we are located at the strike. And therein lies tactiC
of the shipowner. Tlie strike
Sheraton Hotel 37 Street and
broke out at the worst possible
Lexington Avenue. The Can­
teen will function every moment, for the case had only
been presented to the "WLB
Tuesday night. Our first
panel the day before, and the
show include such artists as
Frances Faye, Arthur Blake, panel had promised a prompt
decision — provided the boats
Nora Sheridan, the fioor
show- - of Leon and Eddys, were kept in oi&gt;eration during
the time they were considering
Patsy Flick, the Follies Girls,
the case.
Sid Gary, Name Band and
several other artists. Please
BRASS HATS MOVE come and help us celebrate.
Less than 24 hours after the
—SPIVY
panel had heard the case, the
pin was pulled, all the Brass Hats
began to scream about the sabo­
taging of national defense. Be­
fore the union officials had re­
ceived any official notification
of the strike, three army and
navy meri were on their way to
New Bedford, and the Boston
papers had mysteriously receiv­
ed a wild press release telling of
the hundreds of people strande'd
at Martha's Vineyard (all of
which was promptly printed on
the front pages of Monday's
papers).

The British Broadcasting Company reported Est week that its German monitering station had
picked up an official Nazi broadcast which admitted that the S.S. Rcbin Moore had been tor­
pedoed on May 21, 1941 by a German submarine.
The Robin Moore, manned by a full SIU crew, was the first American merchant ship tor­
pedoed by the Axis in this war, and went down seven months before we were officially at war
with Germany. Up to this week the German Gavernment never officially admitted that on.? of
their subs sank the Robin Moore—even though the SIU crew testified that they had been ques­
tioned by the German skipper of the raider which sent the torpedo plunging into their ship.
The above picture of the survivors was taken when they landed in Capetown, South' Africa,
after spending 14 days in an open Ifeboat.

Fortunately Joe Lapham ar­
rived on the spot early Monday
morning. He had previously
been instructed by the Secre­
tary-Treasurer to inform the
men on the "Martha's Vineyard"
and the "Nantucket" about the
progress of the case before the
Board. When Lapham found
the pins had been pulled, he
telephoned the New York head­
quarters and upon instruction
began to get the men back to
work—explaining how their ac­
tion at this time was playing in­
to the hands of the shipowner.
Only one scheduled trip of the
"Martha's Vineyard" was delay­
ed, in spite of the stories car{Continued on Page 4)
•';®l

I
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j^day. iy7^,.lflS f

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SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

SEAFARERS' IP^TERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor

HARRY LUNDEBERG ------ President
110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

•-a r'l

Secy-Treas.

P. O, ]^x if, Station F., I4evr York Qty

MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Rep.
424 5 th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.

Directory of Branches
ADDRESS

BRANCH
NEW YORK (4)

BOSTON
BALTIMORE (2)
PHILADELPHIA
NORFOLK
NEW ORLEANS (ie().
SAVANNAH
TAMP A&gt;&gt;....*.a.*..«
IVlOBILEa faa**«...,aa
PUERTO RICO
GALVESTON
FT. LAUDERDALE, a a

.

PHOMB

2 Stone Sta. aaaaaaaaaaa^

Deck &amp; Engine Dispatcher. .BOwUng Green 9-3450
.BOwling Green 9-6786
Steward Dispatcher
• BOwying Green 9-3437
Agent
.Liberty 4057
a .330 Atlantic Ara.
Calvert 4539
a 14 North Gay St.
. Lombard 7651
a.6 North 6th St
.Norfolk 4-1083
a a 25 Commercial PL.
.Canal 3336
a 309 Chartres St
• Savannah 3-1728
a .218 East Bay St.
Tampa MM.1329
..423 East Piatt St
..55 So. Conception St...... Dial £-1302
.Puerto
de TIerra
a a 45 Ponce de Leon
a .219 20th Street • ...aaaaa .Galveston a-8043
..2021 Sa Federal Hightray...Ft. Lauderdale 1601

PUBLICATION OFFICE:
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
•
New York City
BOwling Green 9-834tf

CREW HONORS BAKER
FOR HEROISM AT SEA
RESOLUTION
WliEfeHAS, On Ajirii 11, 1949, tiftcni tSNe Oecaslon of an enemy
attack tipfon this vessel and the subse^ent teihporary abandonteent of said vessel. Ordinary Seaman, caeorge E. Baker did vol­
untarily climb down a rape ladder wMie the ship was still under
way and at great risk to himself did cut lohse a stamped lifeboat
containing the Chief E&amp;igineer, J. G. Erstns, a on^ armed man, "At the recent NMU Conven­
tion the stage was dressed up ds a
from the side of the vessel, and
'Liberty Ship' with Joe Curran
WHEREAS, in consequence of such act the aforesaid George E.­ standing npoji the bridge."
Baker did place his life in danger, and suffered fatigue and im­
—News Report.
mersion for a period of nearly half an hour, part of the time in
ftoating oil, before being picked up by a lifeboat, and
'^Captain" Curran
WHEREAS, such utter disregard df danger to himself and
T^lmgness tP risk his life fdr a partially cripped shipmate unable
to help himself are a credit to the finest traditions of the Ameri­
can Merchant Marine, now therefore be it

W:

He stood on the deck
Of a land-locked ship.
Far, far from the danger zone,
iRESOLVED, that We his shipmateSsi undersigned as a slight A make-beliere ship
token of our admiration for his cotirageoUs action, do hereby pre­ With a inake-beiieVe skipper,
sent this resolution to the said
Let tWs, by all, be known,
A paper-mache afaip
GEORGE £. BAKBR
On a political sea,
and be it further
^ With Cap. winds that were
•RESOLYED, that three capies be made Of this resolution. One *
fun Mown.
to be given to the said George E. BtakSr as a Dieiueuto of tills crew
and vessel. The second to be ueiit to the SilT.-of which the said In spite of the roaring
Ordinary Seaman is a member. With a tequest that this resolution Gales of load' words
be published In the Seafarer's Log, if the tJiiion may see fit. The
And Conuminist- breeze that
third copy to be sent to Smith &amp; Johnson Co., owners of this ves­
blew,
sel, to do with as they may see fit.
The ship dldh't sfatrer.
The ship coaldn't move.
DATED this 22nd day of June, fii the year Of our Lord, 1943.,
And landlocked Were Its Pilot$&gt; too,
HEADQUARTERS Snd ITANK GR.
For highly |mid hoinbast
AaPaOa 7S8 Ua Sa ABMY
Cannot hierit the deeds
That seamen are called on
Subject: George E. Baker, Ordinary Seumait
to do.
To. Whom it may concern.
•
f
la On April 11, 1943 after the ship upon which I was Cargo LE ENVOI:
Sectirity Officer was engaged in enefiiy action, I saw George E.
A phony ship and a phony
Baker go to the aid and rescue the one armed Chief Engineer,
skipper,
*
who was in a sinking lifeboat.
Ladling
the
soup
with a
2. This man did at his own accord risk his life and endanger
Communist
dipper,
himself in order to save the life of a shipmate.
Dipping the GRAVY by the
3. I personally saw and witnessed the whole episode.
light of the moon,
4. This man should be awarded some medal to give hjin pro­
Charting
their course by theper recognition for upholdhig -the txtiditions of the Merchant
Great
Homed spoon,
itatlne.
Alas,
men
awaken
from their
WlLUAlit D. SINGLETGN 0263682
sleep
ioo.soon!
'
Major, XT. fl. Army
Cargo Security Officer
'—Top-An'-Lift

f

^The Call

Out of the Foes^l
by

X.
We wonder why the President ordered Admiral Land (so he
says) to put 50% of our new ships tljiat will come down the ways
under British Registry? There are thousands of trainees at
GheepshOad Bay Who have to wait from 3 to 6 months after they
finish their course before they can be assigned to a ship. Then
there are menibers of the various seamen's unions who have to
wait arourid some time (especially after a convoy or two comes in)'
and still Admiral Land answered the former Shipping Board stiff,
"No Coffee time Joe," that there Is a shortage of American seamen,
and that the President deemed it wise to turn over half of out
new ships to the British.
A little while back we were talking to a British Mate, who
informed us that tliefe was a shortage of British seamen, that
the coinpahMs in England had to take a great number of blaeklisted men to sail their ships. Now they suddenly have a surplus
of British seaffiefl arid our government Is worried about the Brit-i
ish seameft -haVirig too riiany wrirtfclas in their bellies (while our
ships are Feturriiftg to Port on shoi't rations) so they turn oVef
our new ships to them.
Admiral Land states that the ships are going to be turned
back to'us after the Wftr. We happen to remember the condition
in which a nev/ C-2 was, turned back lo us after the British had
the ship for 2 trips. "The ship was the kind that American seamen
call a horiie,-swivel seSite iri' the mess room, tiled bath, etc. When
the British got the ship they tove out the swivel seats and replaced
them with wooden benches and boarded-up the showers so the
British seamen wouldnit get the idea that he was entitled to such
luxury. The engine room was a wreck and needed new fittings
before the ship could make another voyage. So you see what will
happen to all our new ships after they get through with them.
They will be in woi'st condition than some of our rust buckets are
in at the present time. It .seems as though our Government is not
concerned vrith the welfare of American seamen after the war, nof
what hstppens to those ten million men after they return from the
war. It's the same old story, United States foots the bill and the
taxpayers gets it In the rieck.

jll

�Friday, Inly 3*, 1943

NEW ORLEANS

THE EEAFA&amp;EKg LOO

WHArS DOING

Page ThMfli
do something for their couirtey,
to help win the war, and, incl-i
dently to benefit themselves, flnancially and otherwise. What
the average person wants to
know is this: what has the SIU
done, or what will it do, which
vvould make it worth while to
invest his money in a union book
and pay dues? The answer to
this queston Is: Look at the
wages, overtime and the work­
ing conditions of the SIU con­
tract ships. They head all, which
is Something for the NMU to
shoot for to get in their con­
tracts. Ask any member of thq
SIU, he can tell you.
In the first place, the SIU la
an honestly-run Union, We in­
vite anyone to produce evidence
to the contrary. This union la
clean and its officials are hon­
est, will not sell you out. It haa
an unblemished record. Its of­
ficials do not shake a tin can in
front of your face everytime you
pay off, or call at the union hall,
to give a helping hand to Russia,
Bridges, U. S. S. or what have
you. And we do not sponsor lost
causes; we do not engage in po­
litical action, or does it collect
or atten^pt to collect funds for
any outside crganizations, move­
ments, causes, or individuals.
"When this war Is over, you -will
need the SIU. Don't let your
union spirit down now.
E. R. WALLACE, .Agent

• Things here are in the usual
dtUier, nothing to do but chew
feiger mails for a few days then
the phone starts and all the
scows that other ports refuse
to have anything to do with
start dropping in here. The
pride of the Ore line came pole- with the outfit. At least Bro. few of the old PhlUy stiffs are thick to know what NAM signi­
hig up the bayous. Senor Squires Jason can rest assured the ^ips beginning to show up here, and fies, for your information, it is
was on hand ' to- .state that she carrying Sea Bees are well arm ready to sail another rust buck­ the National Association of Man­
was a beauty, a good feeder and ed and well convoyed and not et lanywhere or anyhow. Hodge ufacturers, who would have a
a mighty fine ship along with many, if any, get hit by tin fish­ states that he went aboard the real union man shot if he asked
other things. One of the other es. TTie quarters for troops go­ above named vessel, and made for a cnimb of bread. In closing,
things was the fact that Squires ing over seas arc not as roomy himself a sandwich, whereupon, Henry, please allow me to state
tells me that we work under the and comfortable as the quarters five large cock-roaches immedi­ that the kind of tripe that you
West Coast agreements but not SIU men have on ships, so Jason ately grabbed the sandwich away write, such as the Merchant
the general rules. I pointed out will have to put up mth cramp­ from him, and from what Sailors do nothing on board
to the gent that the SUP states ed quarters for a few weeks go­ Hodge avers, one of the roaches ships, and that the gun crew
very clearly that Q.Ms, shall ing across. Bon voyage, Di'o. Ja­ must have been a Charley Mc- does it all, would fit very good
(3arthy, for he yelled: Hey Corn into the Chicago Tribune, or I
stand gangway watch, he says son.
Pone, don't you get any mustard might go so far as to say the
Brother
Bob
Burton
is
out
at
no. Showed him in the Cooks
on
these Iron Maidens (Liberty "DAILY SHIRKER" (Daily
the
Rest
Home
in
Pass
Christian,
and Stewards that meal hours
Ships)?
He's
lost
three
ships
Missfissippl.
Worker, to you Hank).
for supper is from 5:00 o'clock,
Harry
(Man
Mountain
Dean)
since
the
war
started,
so
it
looks
Enough said now, Mr.- Editor,
he says no. I say we shall have
Collins,
has
lost
14
pounds,
3
like
he's
a
bad
bet
as
a
ship­
and
so for an adios from the
committee, lie says no commit­
oimches
running
up
and
down
mate.
He's
very
un-patriotic
be­
gang
in the Scrapple Eating City
tee. I say I ship one good crew
the
waterfront.
Keep
it
up
Harry
cause
he
just
don't
bring
the
and
from
the writer, scallions to
this ship and I sing Bye and
and
you
will
soon
be
as
stream­
ships
back
after
taking
them
the
likes
of Pegler, McLemore
Bye.
lined
as
Joe
Volpian
used
to
be
and
their
bosses.
out.
The
last
crew
that
was
with
One thing that gets mc rather
when
he
was
a
working
stiff.
Bob
claim
he's
a
damn
good
D.C.J.
, warm around the collar, all the
Rosey Rosenberg, the galloping
draft dodgers in the nation are cook or maybe the fish he cook­ Ordinary
has now gal­
telling each other how to rim ed tasted good because they loped backSeaman
GALVESTON
on
board
of a liberty
were
in
the
lifeboat
for
11
days.
the war. Ferinstance, every night
rust
bucket
to
go
to
parts
un­
Bob
said
he
doesn't
recommend
in my search for gems of wis­
dom I turn on my five buck the rations they have in the known. Hey Rosey, did you Things have picked up in the
(pre-war) radio and about all I lifeboats for a good mid-night really fall for that little red­ past week for this port. Had the
in Australia? Remember experience of seeing the condi­
hear is the great need for mer­ snack, and fish cooked with sun head
you
are
an old-timer Rosey, and tions on a ship that the com­
burn
oil
is
much
better
than
chant seamen. They state very
we
are
at a premium here m pany will not sign an agreement
anything
they
have
in
the
boats.
definitely that this is vital and
America,
and I'm not cooking with any union. The fireman on
Bob
said
for
all
SIU
men
that
that all recruits shall be draft
with
gas
either.
watch, while working cargo be­
are
in
the
Gulf
Area
to
come
out
NORFOLK
free. Also they advertise that if
Joe
(RACE
HORSE)
Volpian,
tween
5
p.m.
and
8
a.m.,
does
to
Camp
Kittiwake
and
really
you go to the upgrade school
that they have here that this is enjoy life, according to Bob it's according to the Galley News is not receive any overtime. This West Ck&gt;ast shipis are piling in­
around New York, and the ship carries no deck engineer. to Norfolk every day, Hammond
also draft free, I have men who tops and he is going to home­ still
writer,
who has just made a tour The overtime is 85c per hour. Lumber, American Haywire,
stead
until
they
kick
him
out.
have gone to sea for years, one
of
Louisiana,
Mississippi, Ten­ Two pots on the stove, while the Warehouser, McCormick, Alaska
C.
J.
STEPHENS,
man has had exactly five weeks
nessee,
Indiana,
Illnois, and saloon has pork chops and what Fisheries, etc., and thus far not
Patrolman
aidiore since the war started. He
back
through
Florida
finds out •not, the messroom is served hot a single S'UP member has re­
signed on foreign articles on the
that
now
that
"Count
Fleet," dogs. The steward was asked mained in Norfolk after paying
seventh, on the tenth (nearly
PHILADELPHIA
that
great
champion
race
horse for milk for the crew, he" stated off. This month so far -we have
sailing day) he got his orders to
has
retired,
Joe
will
not
be
that milk was only for the offi­ shipped 18 AB's, 13 Ordinaries&gt;
report for Induction, he went to Regards to all SIU &amp; SUP to pick any winners. Now able
Joe,
cers.
And for dessert (plenty of 2 Carpenters and one Bos'n on
his board and told them he was members all over the world, and we know your a great handiprunes,
dried peaches) when these ships, the majority of
about to sail. No smoke. Army here we come with a little bit of oapper from the City of New
there
is
plenty of fresh fruit them permit card men. There
bound. He contacted the hall sense and also a little nonsense. Orleans, and never a one horse
here
in
this
port going to waste. are beefs galore on these ships
and we called everybody in th^
parlay
player.
Get
in
there
and
Our
old
pickle
puss
Agent,
Jo
Yes,
boys,
this
is an American but most of them have to be
State and at the last minute,
pitch
Joseph.
Where,
oh
where
Jo
Flanagan
paid
Philadelphia
WSA
owned
ship.
referred to the hall in New York
frem what he gathered from
are you Ray "Red" Sweeney? I was to understand that all —another headache for Weiseverybody he decided to sail any- a recent visit, and "OLD SAR­ See
Joe does not cry his quarters on the Liberty ships berger.
Mfray. We may have a real beef CASM," himself is still the ugli­ eyes that
out
over
Count Fleet.
est
man
in
the
universe,
but
he
were to be uniform. Not on this Right now the most acute lo­
on this in the near future and
The
writer
has
just
won
bis
came
into
the
hall
dressed
ala
one.
"Where the oilers room is cal headache is a shortage of
if vre do I believe that we should
case
against
a
famous
Mlobile
SS
John
Barry
more.
But
that
Army
on
the
starboard side, that was coal burning firemen, both white
carry it to 'the highest power
Co.,
and
such
case
set
a
preced­
G.I.
haircut
isure
looked
bad.
Are
torn
dovra,
made into a real good and colored. FLASH to Brother
possible and find out once and
you
planning
on
joining
the
ent
that
no
matter
where
a
sea­
room
for
none
other than the FLANAGAN: We have a four
fof all if the fink herders can
U.
S.
Army
or
the
Salvation
steward.
The
oilers
were pushed watch agreement with one com­
man
gets
hurt
or
injured,
as
guarantee clearance and the
back
in
the
small
room
on the pany and in addition an extra
long
as
he
is
on
the
articles,
and
Army,
Jo
Jo?
men that are actually sailing
Leo
(The
Lip)
Gillis
is
doing
port
side.
In
Washington
they fireman is carried plus every
did
not
get
injured
through
his
the ships get kicked around like
told
me
nothing
but
full
lockers
own
misconduct,
the
SS
Com­
real
well
now.
He
is
the
Dis­
one getting every fourth trip off
a football.
patcher here, and is doing a pany is responsible. This is a for our gallant seamen, not on wth full pay—^this goes for the
Steady as she goes.
swell job, both as a dispatcher break for all Merchant Seamen, this ship. By the looks of this AB's also. The Cooks get every
ARMY, Agent and a diplomat. We always and though all of the SS stooges ship, they are starting to bring other trip off with pay.
knew thaf you had the braim^ and their under-stooges tried back conditions of the old days. BROTHER PARKER and the
Shipping has slowed down and initiative Lippy, and from like hell to beat the case, the Here is something for the RMO Tampa gang should be interest­
some around this port. Plenty now on, when George (The United States Supreme Court and unorganized to think over. ed in knowing that ADMIRAL
of shipping on West Coast ships. Greek) Karpctos tries to tell us said to them: Pay off and shut Why should a seaman join the BLDJKIE ROBERTS has dis­
SIU. Why should he join a union carded his high pressure outfit
Had a beef on a ship from the that you are dumb enough to up.
coast in regards to transporta­ sail on mollasses tankers, we are Rope chokers (AB's) are real­ just to get a job, why should he in favor of a shovel and is now
tion, the beef is still hanging going to ship him over to Sicily. ly scarce around here, and as pay dues. Aren't unions more busily manhaandling the black
fire with the crew remaining on The SS
of a certain well Curve Ball Wallace once stated: or less of a racket? Aren't union diamonds. "Red" Simmons is
the ship and the Captain trying known steamship line, and this We have good AB's and then we leaders usually unscrupulous, or Ch. Steward on the same wagon
to get them to pay off under is no BULL either, tried to leave also have those that like to go downright dishonest? What do and several other Tampaltes,
mutual consent. All other ships with a full verified crew of sea­ to school first to learn how to they ever do for their member­ including "Red" Duffy, "Babe"
that paid off the crew under men, and also a double crew of really lay down and let the hon- ship? These questions are not Miller, and Brother Gonzalez,
mutual consent later paid off cock-roaches and termites. The est-to-God AB's do the real new Brother. You have heard have also become knights of the
the remaining crew members crew got In connection with our work. In fact, some of these them before; in fact, they are shovel and slice bar.
with transportation back to the very boisterous Agent, and he trainees ask so many foolish and very old. Let us endeavor to ex­
coast. Anyone having a beef in immediately went into a few nonsensical questions that tkey amine these questions and de­ A beef on a new South Atlan­
regards to transportation should contortions, face turning red, will drive a real AB to see a psy­ termine wheather there is any tic Liberty ship was settled sat­
sit tight until all the cargo is forehead white, and fists doub­ chiatrist to find out whether basis for us to believe that they isfactorily after a few logs were
o.ut, then they will probably pay led up, and boy what a grand they have dementia-praecox or are true. If they are true, no cancelled and charges against
off with transportation back to slam battle he had with this psychoisis. In American the one should join a labor union; two crew members dropped. We
the coast.
- . no one should join the SIU. Let believe the Captain is now a
famous company's stooges. (All above means crazy.
wiser man and incidentally, the
One of our ships went out re­ of the battle was in words). Hell Henry McLemore is at the us see:
cently with quite a few Sea Bee's •Yes, he won, and the company whole old quashy bunk again. One does not have to join the mate a sadder man. Other beefs
aboard. I wonder if Brother had the ship fumigated, much Harry, are you trying to be a SIU to get a job. Almost every on other ships were on minor
Jason, former Patrolman from against their will.
second Westbrook Pegler? If so, member of the SIU had, or could issues and were straightened
' N.O., will be one of the many Sea Clarence (Corn Pone) Hodge, then why don't you get paid for of had a job before he ever out aboard ship. A NMU Stew­
Bees being sent across? Bro. Ja­ Pete (ha ha) De Vries, Catha- your coliunn (Pegler does) and heard of the SIU. Why? Many ard crept aboard a Bull ship
son didn't-know Sea Bees were houla Larsen, Bob (Do the worst also you can get on the NAM'S members joined the SIU in or­ but was promptly yanked and
sent overseas when he joined up you can) Hillman and quite a payroll also. In case you are too der to help us sail the diip, to
{Continued on Page 4)

Around the Ports

�Ta.ge Four

THE SEAFARERS LOG

^Around The Ports Company

Foments Strike
To Jeopardize W.L.B. Case

MWEBAgain

Friday, July 30, IMS

MONEY DUE
The Crew of the S.S. Richard
Henry Lee can collect $125 at­
tack bonus money for the Port
of Algiers on March 26, 1043, by
calling at the Calmar Line of­
fice, 25 Broadway, New York
City.

[Continued from Page 3)
replaced with a man from the
antics of Mr. Haas. The Union
[Continued from Page 1)
hall.
has
delt with Mr. Haas before,
ried
in
the
Boston
and
New
¥/ARNrMG ^ QUITE A FEV/
and
every
time there is a merest
York
newspapers
which
made
it
NMU BORERS ARE CREEPING
ABOARD SIU SHIPS IN BALTI­ appear that a full fledged strike suggestion of a work stoppage,
•
"»
»
MORE AND NEW YORK THRU was being conducted by the he goes Into a tail spin. This
Crew of SJS. A^tt Ransome
time, however, he seemed
THE MEDIUM OF THE WSA— union.
has 3 days subsistence and
strongly
unperturbed
about
the
We get rid of the termites here
SHIPOWNER GAIN
strike. All day Sunday he made transportation money coming.
[Continued from Page 1)
but the best cure is an examin­
Collect Smith £e Johnson, 89
arise where negligence is not ation of discharges pf these Those are the bare facts. We no attempt to get in touch with
Broad
Street, New York City.
present, and accordingly, no guys when they first show up. say that this was a shipowner either the Boston or New York
»
• .»
right of compensation, except Today two of them showed up inspired strike because, first, it office of the union. All day Mon­
Bosun
of
S.S.
Matt Ransome
the very limited right to main­ from the WSA and in addition worked to the obvious advan­ day he made no attempt to get has 97 hours overtime &lt;x&gt;mlng.
tenance and cure, from the re­ to admitting NMU membership tage of the shipowners who had in touch with the Boston or New
See Patrolman. Hart, Room 502,
sulting disability will exist. Fur­ after their papers were exam- presented an extremely weak York ofidce of the union. Al­
2 Stone Street, New York City,
thermore, the question of what Lned, they also admitted having cavse to the Board the day before though Hawk put through two
* » »
is negligence under wartime isailed SIU ships on trip cards. and who stood to gam by thou­ long distance calls for him on
Following Steward Depart­
conditions presents many diffi- We dispatched them right back sands of dollars in pay increas­ Monday, he was unavailable at
ment
men have money coming
both
times
and
has
not,
to
this
to the WSA. Their names are— es being refused by prejudicing
cut problems.
from
the
last trip on the S. S.
date,
spoken
to
Hawk
who
heads
As was so pertinently pfointed MONROE SIMMON and WM. J. the Board against the union:
Josiah
Bartlett:
&lt;
the
union
concerning
the
walk­
out to the Congress in tlie course LARKIN. Watch out for these and second, because there is a
KARL
KARLSON—$2.53
out.
It
seemed
as
if
the
strike
of the hearings on the "Omni­ birds. A committee from the series of extremely suspicious
JAMES WEST-$2.53
fit right into his plans—^thus ac­
bus Bill," the vessel and her floor examined them and recom­ circumstances which pointed di­
JAMES
BATTLE—$2.53
counting
for
the
absence
of
his
cargo are fully protected against mended that they be allowed to rectly to the guilt of the ship­
* » »
usual case of apoplexy.
all risks of loss, expense, or ship only after repudiating the owner and several of his highly
Deck
Department
of S.S. Grace
While Mr. Haas and Mr. Mul­
,
damage, and it seems to the NMU and paying all dues and placed friends.
Abbott
has
overtime
coming.
len took great care that the
Board that every effort should assessments plus dues for the Here are the details:
Collect
Calmar
Line
office
in „
Union did not hear of the strike,
be made in justice to the sea­ time they were sailing on a SIU SATURDAY (Aftemoori, July
New
York.
i
24) John Hawk, Carol Johnson, someone took good care that
men and in the interest of the ship.
the War Labor Board and the ing cooked up by the company,
American Merchant Marine, to FINALLY-If any old timers John Mogan and Joe Lapham
Boston
papers did hear about it. but was coming to give a routtrio
want
a
good
soft
coal
burning
presented the SIU's case for
afford to them coverage equally
The
first
official notice of the report to the_crews. Being on^
job
with
plenty
of
groceries
and
wage raises for the New Eng­
comprehensive. Regandlesst of
strike
that
the union received the scene he was able to prompt­
the cause which results in the a good agreement — THEN GET land men to a WLB panel in
was
the
following
telegram re­ ly explain the situation to the
loss of life or disability of the ON THE WAY TO NORFOLK— New Bedford. The hearing end­ ceived Monday afternoon:
men and get the boats sailing.
seamen the practical conse­ White or colored—there are jobs ed around 5:30 p.m. and Hawk
If, as Haas had no doubt plan=
quences to him or his depend­ for both if they're book mem­ and Johnson left for New York,
W.L.B. THREAT
bers.
Mogan for Boston, Lapham for
ned, no union official had been
ents remains unchanged.
"Following wire sent today to in the port Monday morning,
MARTY
TRAINOR,
Agent
Providence,
instructed
to
report
Therefore, the Board respect­
back to the New England men union committee. Quote. The the Brass H^'ts and the Boston
fully suggests that the War
on Monday morning. The three action of the unlicensed person­ papers could really have worked
SAVANNAH
Shipping Administration con­
members of the panel presum­ nel of the steamers Nantucket themselves into hysterics, and
sider what steps might be taken,
and Martha's Vineyard of the the shipowners little game would
as a wartime measure, to pro­ . Shipping in this p&gt;ort is still ably left for their homes.
SUNDAY, July 24: Still in New New England Steamship Com­ have been a complete success.
vide death and disability insur­ pretty fair with new ships com­
pany line in engaging in a work
As it is, in spite of the prompt
ance which will cover the field ing out of Jacksonville, Wil­ Bedford and gumshoeing around stoppage is a violation of labor'^s
the
ships
was
Mr.
Haas,
Supt.
of
action
of the Union and the un­
mington
and
here.
Average
Of operating and industrial risks
pledge that there would be no derstanding and • disciplined ac­
New
England,
and
(strangely)
a
about
one
ship
a
week
to
find
a
lying beyond the Eiecision lA as
strikes for the duration of the tion of the crews in returning to
Amended, of the Maritime War crew for and stay busy trying to Mr. John Mullen, representative
war as well as a violation of the
temergency Board, In the event find old-timers for them. A few of the Disputes Divison of the promise given by your duly work, there is a po.sibility that
Boston
Regions
War
Labor
Board
the WLB panel may have been
the War Shipping Administra­ of the old-timers have been
elected officers to the War Labor
tion considers it desirable and drifting in here lately and I who attended the Panel hearing Board panel which is now con­ prejudiced.
necessary to provide a form of don't know whether watermel­ of this case the day before. Why sidering the merits of your case. This whole thing smells of
industrial insurance, the Board ons remind them of torpedoes, Mr. Mullins remained in town "You are warned also that the Shipowner provocation. For our
suggests that the agreement of but every time they pass a is a mystery which grows thick­ strike is a violation of the War part, we intend to track down
both unions and operators to watermelon stand they make a er when his subsequent actions Labor Disputes Act. The Army any stooges that may be in the
organization and are operating
the broad objectives of the pro­ detour, but I guess that will soon are examined.
and Navy have advised us of to the detriment of the union.
At
9:15
Sunday
morning
Mr.
posed program should be solic­ change. Shipped a crew last
their great interest in Lliis mat­
ited and the support of such in­ week for a new Calmar Line out Mullen decides- to take a ride on ter. Only when normal opera­ But we certainly exjiect the Bos­
ton Regional War Labor Board
terests obtained to the greatest of Wilmington and am expect­ the first boat out. Who turns
tions
are
restored
can
this
Board
up
as
his
traveling
companions
to investigate the strange con­
possible extent prior to any con­ ing a new Liberty ship out of
consider the promptly dispose of duct of Mr. Mullen.
but
Mr.
Hass,
Superintendent
here
around
the
last
of
this
sideration of the details of a
month, July. Have a few men of the Line and Mr. Valez, As­ your wage demands. This work The ships are now sailing and
specific insurance problem.
registered here but will be look­ sistant to Hass.* When Mullen stoppage may prejudice the back the men are awaiting the decis­
(Signed)
first went aboard he was careful pay question before the Board. ion of-the WLB. But the men
Edward Macauley, Chairman ing for more men with ratings
Unquote."
and the union is entitled to full
in all departments around that to let all the men know that he
Frank P. Graham
LOUIS R. BECKER,
was
from
the
War
Labor
Board
protection from further provo­
time.
If
there
are
any
old-timers
John R. Steelman
Asst. Dir. Disputes Division, cative actions on the part of
•
•
•
with ratings in all departments and had heard their case pre­
War Labor Board (10).
sented by the union the day be­
either the shipowner or Mr.
July 23, 1943 who want a new ship, come on
By
the time this telegram had Mullen.
fore.
After
having
established
down around that time -^and I
Admiral E. S. Land,
more than likely will be able to himself as a WLB official, he arrived in New York'-the Army
Administrator
spent the rest of the voyage and Navy Brass Hats were al­ TELEGRAM FROM
use you.
War Shipping Admin i.&gt;Lratlon
CHARLES WAID, Agent scratching the back of Mr. Haas. ready on their way to New Bed­ THE NATIONAL WAR
Wiashingt'On. D. C.
Seeing Mufien and Haas play­ ford and the Boston papers had
Dear Sir:
ing footie all day naturally con­ smeared the story over theh LABOR BOARD
July 27, 1943
vinced the crew that the ship­ front pages.
I received from the Maritime
John
Hawk,
Sec.-Treas.
owner had the case all sewed up.
War Emergency Board a copy
RUMP COMMITTEE
Seafarers International Union
Their appeal for a wage raise
of a letter sent by that body to
New York, N. Y.
The
"union
committee"
referhad
already
been
shuffled
you concerning compensation
Dear
Sir:
around
by
the
Board
for
8
ed
to
In
the
telegram,
and
the
rules for injured and disabled
WILUAM R. DIXON
Your telegram of July 27th
Your union book has been months without any action, and body to which the original of
seamen. Since the MWEB asked
Chairman Davis
•that I send .my comments to found. Call fcr it at the office the sight of Mullen and Haas on the message had been sent, was addressed to
of the Secretary-Treasurer in such intimate terms put them a rump committee set-up aboard has been received. Thank you
you, I am doing so.
right in the mood to pull the the ship under the encourage­ for your statement of the sue-In the first place let me re- New York City.
ment of "company" stooges, and cessful efforts of the Seafarers
piAt
I&gt;eat what tliis union has said
which had conducted the .strike International Union in bringing
time and again—the question of men's Act? If so, we are defin­
COMPANY STOOGES
behind the union's back. We to a quick end the strike which
compensation for injuries aside itely opposed. Does it have
from regular war risk insurance something else in mind? If so, On the way to the ship's berth are reliably informed that Mr. recently took place at the New
in New Bedford, a couple of the. Mullefi had in his possession the England Steamship Company.
is entirely outside of the juris­ it does not make this clear.
Should your office draw up crew members (who ore now be­ names of this committee and We have discussed the con-^
diction of the MWEB. The Board
was established for the sole pur­ concrete proprasals, this union ing* investigated by the union was prepared to act upon it four tents of your telegram with rep­
pose of settling bqpus and war would be happy to consider for possible connection with the hours before the walkout occur- resentatives of our Boston office,
agitate ed. It looks like he and Mr. and understand that they have
risk insurance disputes between them and render an opinion. shipowner), began to
for
a
'strike.
By
the
time
the Haas had their lines well laid. received data relating to the
But
we
oan
not
give
blanket
en­
the unions and the operators. It
ship
tied
up,
the.
crew
was
con
­
Unfortunately for Mr. Haas causes of the work stoppage.
dorsement
to
the
vague
gener­
should confine itself to this task.
vinced
that
the
cards
were
and
Company, Joe Lapham was
alities
submitted
to
you
by
the
Very trulys yours,
As for the letter, I find it
stacked
against
them
and
walk­
In
New
Bedford oa Monday
MIWEB.
MELVIN LEVY,
vague. Does the Board have In
ed off.
morning. He had no prior
Very truly yours,
mipd some sort of compensation
Adminiatratlve Officer
And here begins the strange knowledge of the walk-out be­
JOHN HAWK
act, similar to the LongshoreWar Labor Board

Authority

» • '» *

'exsonals

n\

I

•

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MWEB AGAIN OVERSTEPS AUTHORITY&#13;
SHIPOWNER FRAMES-UP 'NEW ENGLAND' SEAMEN&#13;
NEW WITHHOLDING TAX ON WAGEX EXPLAINED&#13;
CREW HONORS BAKER FOR HEROISM AT SEA&#13;
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.

....

, ••'• ,

-i

-

•

SECSRITV
IR
UHITY
VOL. V.

OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA

Jl

w

NEW YORK, N. Y., FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 1943

No. 19

ITF Workers Anti-Strike War Labor Board Set Straight
Help Topple Bill Invoked On 'New England' Provocations
Mussolini
For Miners

' - Ti

Last week the LOG reported in detail the plot of the New England line to foment a
strike among the SIU crews and thus jeopardize our case before the Regional War Labor
Board. We can report that from all indications the shipowner completely failed to real­
ize his objectives.
To begin with, prompt action on the part of the union got the men back to work
•and prevented any extended tieup of the ships. The crews were
fully informed as to the status
of their beef before the WLB
and as to the shipowner maneu­
ver in creating a strike situation.

(ITF)—The dissolution of the PITTSBURGH —July 26 — A
Italian fascist regime and the Federal Grand Jury investigat­
break-up of the totalitarian ing recent unauthorized strikes
party organs which for so long in the soft coal fields of south­
ruled the Italian people through western Pennsylvania yesterday
terror and oppression, are de­ indicted 30 persons, charging
cisively hastened by the trans­ conspiracy to prevent produc­
port workers unions of Great tion of coal in violation of the
Britain and other Allied nations law.
with headquarters in England,
the American ofiBce of the Inter­ The prosecutions were the first
Moreover, the full story of the
national Transport Workers' since enactment of the Ctonnallyshipowner move was spread by
Federation announced today af­ Smith Anti-Strike Law on Jime
the union before all members of
By Matthew Dmhane
ter receipt of authoritative in­ 25.
the
Regional Wax Labor Board,
formation from ITF headquar­ The indictments charged de­
There
are
several
thousand
men
coming
into
the
mari­
as
well
as before William Davis,
ters in England.
fendants specifically with "com­
Chairman
of the National War
time
industry
who
have
no
conception
of
the
struggles
that
Galling upon the Italian rail- bining, conspiring and confed­
Labor
Board,
and Madam Per­
waymen and other transport erating together to interfere by the men in the industry have fought for in the past, to gain
kins,
Secretary
of Labor. The
workers to prevent the flight of strike and other interruptions the conditions that they are enjoying today. I am going to
imion
has
requested
that the
German forces in Italy, the Al­ with the operations" of mines outline some of the legislative measures that were accom­
WLB
make
a
thorough
investi­
lied transport labor organiza­ operated by the Government.
plished by the world's outstand-^
gation
into
the
real
causes
of.
quiring
sanitary
inspection
to
The
indictment
said
tliose
tions issued a radio appeal to
inging leader of the seamen,
the
strike
and
the
strange
ac­
prevent
sacrifice
of
human
life;
named
"well
knew"
that
the
their former Italian feliow work­
Andrew Furuseth, and the Am­
ers "ito hasten the peace by mines were in possession of the erican Federation of Labor. In repeal of law permitting U. S. tions of Mr. Mullen.
sabotaging railways and other United States and that continu­ order to appreciate the condi­ Marshals to charge a fee of $15 At this point it appears that
transport means at the com­ ous operation was necessary "for tions that the seamen now en­ for executing a libel for wages the imion's counter - offensive
successful prosecution of the joy they should know the his­ on a vessel; to prevent discharge against the shipowner's
mand of the Germans."
"In this manner," the appeal war."
tory of conditions that existed and laying off of crews in for­ provocation has had some mea­
eign ports and to insi&gt;ect oil sure of success, and the case be­
said, "the departure of German
in the past. •
Of
the
30
persons
indicated,
sailing
as well as steam vessels, fore the WLB has not been jeo­
soldiers and offtcials from your
The late Andrew Furuseth was
five
were
presidents
of
local
1882—Secure
defeat of federal pardized.
homeland, will be prevented and
the first legislative representa­
unions
of
the
United
Mine
Work­
bill
designed
to
forbid seamen
German troops will be held back
tive of the American Federation
ers,
one
a
local
ex-president,
one
joining
a
union
for
mutual pro­ Should the Board hand down
until tlie Allied armies can seek
a local vice president, one a of labor, he served in this ca­ tection and made it a conspir­ a decision upon the merits of
them out and destroy them.
checkweighman, 10 local com­ pacity from 1895 to 1902. He was acy and mutiny punishable by the case, the New England men
Now that the time has come, it
mitteemen and one local record­ also Secretary Treasurer of the heavy fines and imprisonment. can be assured of a pay raise.
is you who must paralyze their
ing secretary. Others were mem­ Sailors Union of the Pacific, and
movements and take their food
President of the International 1883—-Called attention to leg­ The shipowner was unable to
bers.
islative tyranny in proposing to conceal the fact that the New
supplies and other means as
Seamens UniOn.'
make
all combinations of sea­ England scale of wages is sub­
they have taken yours."
Bench warrants were ordered
1881—Agitation for laws of
men
punishable
for mutiny and standard by all fair measure­
for arrest of the defendants by benefit to searrien began by the
SABOTAGE OF
ment.
conspiracy.
Federal Judge F. P. Schoonmak- AFL indorsement of a bill "For
ELECTRIC RAILWAYS
1884—
Demanded
passage
of
So that the public may be In­
er and bond was fixed at $1,000 better regulation of the Merch­
bill
for
protection
of
seamen.
formed
on the comparative wage
The Allies transport workers each. Conviction on the charges ant Marine Service both on in­
scales,
we
reprint below one of
organizations laid stress upon would make- the defendants li­ ternational waters and in inter- 1887 — Demanded legislation
the
exhibits
submitted to the
the impwrtance which the two able to fines up to $5,000 or sen­ oceanic cO'mmerce and the pro­ providing that coal vessels in
Board
by
the
union.
coastal railways running the en­ tences up to a year in jail.
tection of life and property on costwise trade shall each have a
This
chart
shows that New
master
instead
of
one
for
ten
tire length of the country and
vessels." The AFL indorsed de­
England pay is- far below wages
vessels.
mands of seamen that number
the electrified lines of Northern
Keep In Touch With of sailors should be regulated by 1889 — Urged International paid by other employers for like
Italy possess for the escape of
work.
the German forces. Sabotage of Your Local Draft Board. the tonnage of the vessel; re­
{Contimud on Page 4)
{Covthiu^d on Page 4)
these vital lines and destruction
of their power stations wili seal AUG. f 93 9a TOO
the fate of the Germans remain­ 150
ing in Italy as well as prevent
sending reinforcements from
other parts of occupied Europe.

Seamen And Their Struggle
Against Exploitation And
Government Repressions

Strike Vote Taken
By Rail Unions

UNION REORGANIZATION
UNDER WAY

.//;

140

The extent to which the fas­
cist system has disintegrated in
recent months and particuiarly
since the defeat of the Axis
powers in North Africa ^ shown
in underground reports from
Italy which reached the ITF
offices shortly before the down­
fall of the dictator.
In practically all industries
and factories groups of anti­
fascist workers are active, who
are organized in celis carrying
on the tradition of the former
trade unions and other labor
institutions crushed by Musso­
lini. "It is through their work
that the workers are taught how
the shortage of manpower and
the military situation can be ex­
ploited to enforcie everyday de{Continued on Page 4)

.•••J-;..

130

1943/

Retail Food Prices
•

WASHINGTON —After having
their wage demands shuffled
around by various government
agencies for almost a year, lead­
ers of fifteen cooperating railway
unions will meet here this week
to set the date for issuing strike
ballots to 1,250,000 railway work­
ers.
The ballots will serve notice
on the govenunent that the
unions finally
mean business
and demand an end to delays in
approving an emergency board
award of an increase of 8 cents
an hour handed down last May.
This award was sabotaged by
Director of Economic Stabiliza­
tion, Fred M. Vinson. Efforts of
the unions to win over Vinson
have been unavailing, and Fhesident Roosevelt has shown no
disposition to over-ride Vinson's
veto of the wage award.

(
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SEAFARERS LOG
V

Published by the

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
OP NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the Am^ican Federation of Labor

HARRY LUNDEBERG

------ Vre^dent

no Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

------- Secy-Treas.

P, O. Box 2'J, Station Pi, New York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE

-

-

- Washington Kep.

424 Jth Street, N. W.^ Washington, D. C.
.«

R!

Directory of Branches
PHONE

ADDRESS

BRANCH
NEW YORK (4)

2 Stone St
Deck &amp; Ensino Dispatcher. .BOwIing Green 9-34S0
Steward Dispatcher
BOwling Green 9-6786
Agent
BOwying Green 9-3437
BOSTON
330 Atlantic Ave
...Uberty 4057
BALTIMORE &lt;2)
14 North Gay St.
Calvert 4539
PHILADELPHIA
8 North 6th St
Lombard 7651
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS (16) . . . 309 Chartres St
Canal 3336
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay SL
Savannah 3-172S
TAMPA
423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St
Dial 2-1392
PUERTO RICO
45 Ponce de Leon
Puerto de TIerm
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-8043
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway. Ft. Lauderdale 1601

^

w

R;

•

PUBLICATION OFFICE:
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8346

NMm Check-off Move
Engineered By Leaders
Fearful Of Rank &amp;'File

• 8V MATT-HtW DUSHAME-*

tioa maJntidns an upgrading night, nor are the men quar-i
MARiTEffiE
school for raise in grade from tered at the school.
WAR EMERGENCY BOARD
ordinary seaman to abte sea­
We would like very much tol
J. Volpin, SIU Patrolmjui, man at Pier 73, East River, NCVv
enlist
your aid in sending qual­
N, Y.: The Board has ruled that York City. This is located at
ified
men
to the schoid for up^
there was an enemy attack and the foot of 25tli Street. At this
grading
because,
as you know^
the crew of the Panama City Is school we have facilities tot
we
are
very
much
in need of
entitled to an attack bonus of giving aH the necessary instruc­
able
seamen
both
to
man
$125.00.
tions, Including lifeboat work. new ships and to replace sea­
The Board is waiting for fur­ This school is open to any sea­ men with fourteen- month's ex­
ther information from the com­ man who is qualified by neces­ perience who go to our offic6rU
panies on the following vessels: sary sea time to be upgraded to schools* to qualify themselves
SS Bayou Chico; SS Blephalet the rank of able seaman.
for officers licenses. Apidtcants
Nott; SS George Gale.
The course of training covers may apply for enrollment eithot
MARITIME TRAINING SERVICE a period from one to two weeks, at our enrolling office at room'
Has agreed to use the facilities which ever is necessary to qual­ 101-45 Broadway, or at Pier 7J«
of the NMU for the upgrading ify seamen who have had nine We are sending you herewith
of CXS to AB's. In the Pilot they months sea experience in the
100 copies of our upgrading cir­
tried to convey the Idea that all deck department, and a period
cular and will be glad to sup­
of
one
month
for
those
who
have
OS who wanted to be upgraded
had
experience
in
the
engine
ply you with as many more ad
would have to go to the NMU
hall in New York and use the department. While in training you can use to advantage.
the men are paid at the rate of
facilities of the NMU.
Very truly yours
i;
$66
per month and receive $3
The MTS has another school
TELFAIR KNIGHT,
in New York for this p-urpose, per day for quarters and sub­
sistence,
which
they
supply
Assistant Deputy
and my advice is for all mem­
themselves.
The
school
is
a
day
Administrator
bers of the SIU who have enough
for Training
time In, to take the opportunity school and does not operate at
offered by the MTS, and attend
their school so that they can be
KEEP CLEAR WITH YOUR DRAFT BOARD
upgraded to AB.
By observing the following simple instructions you will
Mr. Telfaii- Knight, director
continue to receive deferment from military service. Fail
of the training program has sent
to observe these rules and you may wind up in the army.
me a letter on this mater which
I'll quote:
' WHEN SIGNING ON: Give the clerk or skipper all the
Mr. M. Dushane
424—5th St., N.W.
Washington, D. C.

information necessary to fill out RMO Card No. 47 (Green
Card)..

WHEN SIGNING OFF: See that Card No. 48-A is propUnder cover of radical de­ dence game. The only ones who
perly
filled out by skipper or clerk.
mands, the NMU Communist will be un.stabilized will be the Dear Mr. Dushane,
schemers in control of tire Union victims. Tlie NMU "officials" as
Ship out before your allotted time ashore has expired.
In response to your telei^one
seek to establkli the Checkoff of Ctommuniat political parisites
If you have not yet filled out the Green Card, contact your
Union dues—demand which will lean back and collect the conversation I wish, to advise
draft board and let them know that you are sailing.
they have reason to believe they "gravy" from the suckers with­ you that the training organizacan get. And this is their re^ out leaving their chairs. Even
patrolmen and service to the
objective.
sliips
-will be knocked off for the
Only extreme weakness and
price
they
must pay for the -win­
fear on the part of these corrupt
ning
of
the
checkoff to bolster
politicians who seek to stabilize
their
tottering
regime must betheir rule and continuance of
no
beefs—no
demands—^no
noth­
their policies can explain their
May
ing.
With
the
dues
collected
by
Second Debat­ Amend­
Maybe
inaugeration of the checkoff.
Rank
inter­
Vote
Motion
re­
recon­
Once established, these corrupt the Bosses, life will be rosy for
0)
rupt
able
able
required
quired'
sidered
leaders will throw overboard all the Ckunmunist super racketeers.
speaker
demands of the members in re­ Sold down the river, by the
super knaves
Adjourn
No
Yes
No
No
Majority
1(0
1
turn for the preservation of the
Sold
to
the
Bosses,
NMU
Adopt
report
(treated
as
main
checkoff system. The NMU will
Checkoff slaves
motion)
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Majority
12'
Yes
be owned and controlled body
Sing
a
Song
of
Dollars
while
Amend
motion
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Majority
10
Yes
and soul by the American Steam­
you wonder wh-y
Close nominations
No
Yes
No
Yes
Two-thirds
12
Yes
ship Owners Association and the
Curran
talks
of
Liberty.
Can
Information,
requet
for
Yes
No
No
NO
None
NO
n
President and Officers of the
it
be
a
Lie?
No
Limit
or
extend
debate
Yes
Yes
Yes
7
Ttvo-thirds
Yes
NMU will be servants to Frank
Main motion
No
Yes
Ytes
Yes—Top-An'-Lift
Majority
Yes
12
Taylor, President of the AMMI—
Order
of
business,
oa'll
for
.....
Yes
No
No
No
None
No
4
in other words, instead of a
(2)
Parliamentary'; inquiry
—
Yes
No
No
No
None
No
simple Company Union the NMU
(2)
Yes
No
Point of order
NO
No
None
No
will become an adjunot and
No;
Postpone
definitely
.'....
Yes
Yes
Yes
Majority
8
Yes
auxilliary of the employers. It
' NbNo
Postpone indefinitely
....!.
Yes
Yes
Majority
Yes
11
will have ceased to have a free
WILLIAM E. HUTCHINSbON
Yes
No
No
Privilege,
question
of
No
None
No
3
and independent existence, jwid
&amp; JAMES VANADEER
Yes&gt; • No
Question; previous
NoNo
Ttvo-thirds
Yfea
6
will repre.sent the employers As­
Get in touch with Attorney Ratify action taken (treated as
sociation.
Richard M. Cantor at once. He main motion)
Nc
Ytes
Yes
Yes
Majority
."......
^ Yes:
12
That is the meaning of tlxe is at 51 Chambers Street, New
No&gt;
Yes
Yes^
Yes
Majority
P«ce.ss
NO
2
Communist demand that the York City.
Reconsider
(treated
as
main
Shipowners grant the checkoff
Yes
Yes
No
Majority
^ Yes
motion )'
; ,..
12
NO Bostm and crew of S.S. Alcoa
in the coming contract negotia­
&lt;
Refer
or
committ
mofton;
(t&amp;
Pilot
should
contact
Richard
tions this Septi 31st. Messers.
No&gt;
Yes:
Yes
Majority
Yes
Yes'
9
Curran, Myers, Stein and Com­ Cantor regarding the accident
NoYes: ' Yes
Yes
Two-thirds
YOs;
V2
Rescind
(treated;
as
main
mo­
to
Samuel
Renna
on
March
24,
pany, under orders of the Party,
tion)
;—
swe attempting to creep in bed 1943.
Substitute motion (see amend).
with the ^ipowners, under the
JORGES TORRES RENTAS Suspend' rules
No
No
YesTwo-thirds
C-)
No
Nb
•
I9iame blanket with Taylor, the
Your union book has beenNo.
,
Yes;
No
Majority
,
Pfo
Noex-Tammany politician. Well, found. Pick it up at the office of Table motion
(-•)
'No
No
Majority
No ' No
Yes;
they ore also creeping into bed the Secretary-Treasurer in New Withdraw motion
with Boss Hague of Jersey City . York City.
I Numbers indicate precedence of Tnofidns, i. e., 1 first, 12 last. Example a main moUou (12)1.
The NMU leadership will' thenALFRED T. KARTELL
has been made and seconded iwittii: time open for dteeussions, whereupon the motion is amend^dibe "stabilized"
the Hliipown-' Your papers have been, foiuid
(Iffi and seconded; The air^ndmenti must he voted upon first.
ers through the checkoff of and are now at the Custom
wages taken from the pay of the House Pitet Office in New York • 2 No Rank. These motions, whMY can be quickl^p disposed of, are usually incidental to a pend­
«dlctims of the supcF (JP confl'- City.
ing motion and generally involve matters of convenience or requests for toformation.

This Is a Guide to Free Speech
In Proper Conduct of a Meeting

'eAScnais

,!•

I

I

• .-/V'-''-'.-

• .r-.

�anaar, Ao^ost e, 1943

TITK SK ArAtdtKS t O O

WHATS DOING

Around the Ports

HbeM

Pegler Is Denounced
As Foe Of All Seamen

The happie.5t people in the like you for tryiiig to sell ttie
world are those who touch life real people of this grand and
at the greatest number of places glorious country a lousy bill of
him and they told me that he Frank Grief wrote the following and points, and see life as it is goods about how radical the sea­
NEW ORLEANS
would have to go to St. Peters­ letter which received favorable lived in the different cities in­ men are. We have abided by
land and in all ports of the the no strike agreement and can
Things are still bouncing burg to the fink school for three attention:
January
29,
1943
months
before
he
would
be
eligwhole universe. Who but the you name many more that have
around here, most and biggest
squawk of the week is the men able for an AS certificate. Now Subject: Discharge from the merchant seaman can truth­ abided by same? No you would­
Army of the United States fully state the above. He has n't Mr. Pegler.
that are so busy that they can't if that isn't the pay off. I told
for
the purpose of Rejoin­ seen everything that was to be
them
that
this
lad
had
learned
study the shipping rules.
ing
the Merchant Marine. seen from the slums of Cairo, Who have been the real am­
more
about
seamanship
in
the
jWt received notice of two
bassadors of good will to most
men that were torpedoed aboard past eight months and some few To: Commanding Officer, Fort Hong Kong, Shanghai to the foreign countries? Why, cer-r
Story Virginia.
living palaces on the Rue de La
a squarehead ship last year, days that he would ever leam
1.
1 hsarby submit for your Pais in Paris, France, in their tainly I mean the mercliant
in
that
school
in
ten
years,
so
picked up after six days in a
seaman. Who kept the U, S.
open boat they were taken to by George they stated that I consideration a request for dis­ hey-day, yet some of the col­ merchant marine fleet floating
Trinadad by the rescuing vessel was right. Seems to me that charge from the Army of the umnists and cornmentators, yes when things wore tough and we
(an American) then were there Ls .something dead in Den- United States for the purpose even some of the people ashore had to fight the shipowners and
brought by transport to New Or­ .mark when they make that kind of rejoining the Merchant Mar­ have developed the idea (prob­ their stooges and coffee-anders
ine, and base such request on ably brought on by the hysteria
leans. These men could not of statement.
to get living conditions, wiages
the following facts:
Am
expecting
Bro.
Biggs
over
of war) that merchant seaman and security for our loved ones
speak English, they claim to be
a. That by trade I am a are not capable of taking care ashore? No one but the mer­
Portuguese citizens riding a here this week to set up some
merchant marine seaman. of themselves. The writer can chant seaman. Your column did
Swedish wship under English four hundred of them in St.
b. That I was drafted into name quite a few instances not even have a kind word for
charter at the time of the sink­ Petersburg. Those men seem to
the army from the mer­ when he, along with other mer­ us in those days, so why in hell
ing. As a reward, these two men be very anxious to affiliate with
the
SIU.
We
have
about
four
chant marine.
chant seamen, had to take care should we ask any favors of youi
wore placed in the federal de­
hundred
of
them
in
St.
Pete
that
That
a shoHage of mer­ of themselves or perish. I speak now, Mr. Pegler? Who is now
c.
tention here, then when this
chant seaman has accur- of the well-known labor hating seeing that all the necessary
place was taken over by the have already lined up or rather
wiU
join
as
soon
as
Bi^s
gets
ed
with a resultant im­ Westbrook Peglar. He has prac­ food and implements of fighting
Coast Guard they were transover
here.
There
arc
about
pairment
in the transpor­ tically suggested that we be for our armed forces are getting
fered to the Parish Prison.
twelve
thousand
commercial
tation
of
overseas
supplies. regimerited now and soon, and overseas and in great numbers
, Neither of these two men have
fishermen
here
on
the
West
That
I
feel
I
could
be of though he does not come right also? Who and how many are
d.
any criminal record so far as
Coast
of
Florida,
and
I
am
sure
greater
service
to
the
war out with it, he tries to impress losing their lives in this great
can be ascertained, their one
that
they
will
join
up
with
the
effort
in
my
civilian
than
upon his public (Big business cause? You can answer all of
and only crime is that they were
in my present military men and cock-roach hanger- this Mr. Pegler. Certainly, we
seamen and they were allowed help of some of the Internation­
capacity.
ons) that we do not deserve the know that you get the Seafarers
out of the prison when a ce»tain al organizers; it will take some
e. That I am not trying to credit that we are getting. We Log and many other union pa­
small Canadian ship was short one that knows something about
evade my duty to my are human, and may I go so far pers, and then try to dig some
handed. Now that they are be­ fishing and organizing, and I be­
lieve
that
we
have
them
in
our
country,
but am firmly as to avidly state, that we are dirt out of them. And when you
ing replaced by a crew which is
own
ranks.
convinced
that it is my also humane and patriotic. read this article, if you do, then
sent from the ship's home port,
That
many
men
in
the
SIU
patriotic
duty
to be of the Many and many, more seamen I am not apologizing for any­
they are due once again to re­
will
be
a
big
boost
to
the
AFL.
most
service
in
an essen­ now donate to some form of thing that I have widtten, for
take their abode in the Parish
Some
fly-by-night
tried
to
or­
tial
occupation
where charity, and when it comes to you know that it is the truth.
Prison, to stay 'till such time as
ganize
them
but
was
a
complete
there
is
such
a
need
for war bonds to help win this war,
Mr. Shipowner can again use
You have tried many foul tac­
failure.
men
of
my
training
and
the seamen average putting tics to hurt the seaman such as:
them to fill out some ship. This
One
of
our
brothers
died
in
experience.
about one third of then- pay in­ The seaman refused to man the
might be all right Jrom the out­
Havana
this
past,
week,
Bro.
Respectfully
submitted,
to same. This can be proven by guns, they became drunk and
look of the operator, but from
FRANK A. GRIEF statistics.
my way of looking at the ques­ James Walter Smith, and his
refused to work :and the seaman
Hell, yes, the seaman gets a want to take over the gun crews,
George Karpetos, our only
tion it seemis to me that either body was returned to the States
Greek in the branch at the pres­ lot of happiness out of life and many others, and so help
• the men's own Counsel or the for burial.
English shipowner who is re­ Six of the AB's from the Pan ent time, came in late Monday (ashore), but Mr. Pegler, have me, ever^'thing has been proven
sponsible for these men's pre- Orleans acted as Pall-bearers as night and did not make the you ever sat down and figured false. Can you deny that, Mr.
dlctament should be forced to he was Boatswain on there. The Auditing Committee, so after so out the days, nights, weeks and Pegler?
take care of tliem at company's officers and crew sent a very much profuse apjologizing back months that a seaman spends at In conclusion, the writer
expense. Why should this coun­ nice wreath, also the oificei^ and and forth, George has threaten­ sea? Sometimes sailing the wishes to state that you and
try's facilities be used in such crew from the SS Steel Motor ed that if he is ever left off of ships that will ultimately bring your stooges cannot hurt us, as
aind the SIU hall sent wreaths. a future Auditing Committee, us victory, or quite a bit of the
an.unfair manner.
around in life other well known columnists
These men lare asking noth­ He was a good union mau\^and that he will become very vei*y time floating
have come to our aid and have
ing that could not be taken care shipmate and we wish him a peeved and ship out on a Bull boats, rafts and probably just done their best to right a wrong
floating around in tlie cold
of very easy, all they want is to happy voyage. We also, as union line scow.
perpetuated by you and your as­
get a ship which is heading in bro.thers, extent our sympathy Some of the boys, including waters of the seven seas. To be sistants — namely, the labor
the general direction of their and condolences to his family. Casey Jones, took a trip over to sure, you would not care to write haters.
D. L. PARKER, Agent New York with the inteaftion to anything that would help the
homes; England, India, Africa
DAVID C. JONES
ship out, but upon entering the morale of we merchant guys.
or even Australia. Here are men
We
do
not
blame
the
press,
or
hall on the 6th floor and seeing
being held prisons who got in
PHILADELPHIA
all the wild men on the beach, their workers, namely: Report­
this port because they were
they got a trifle jittery and left. ers, Columnists (You are ex­
helping us out.
Well,
here
we
go
again
doing
So they decided to pat and upon cluded from that) and Editors,
Think we should publicize this
business
at
the
same
old
place
ordering scrapple, their favorite but we do blame certain j&gt;eople The following men have
and ishame those responsible in­
and
as
usual,
things
are
some­
native Philadelphia dish, they
to at least getting these men
money coming from Smith &amp;
what slack around here. Only were informed that laccroding to on his weekly stipend. And with Johnson, 80 Broad Street, New
started home.
the seventy-five cents that he
ARMY, Agent one ship in port and that tub the laws of the State of New had left he was gomg to by de­ York ~ City: BELLAH, BIEBcame from Baltimore.
York restaurants were only al­ fense stamps.
MANN, BTLDE, BLAME, CAPllere is some infornmtlon tbat lowed to serve serapple to the
PREY, ENGER, FAIRCLOTH,
HARRY
COLLINS,
Agent
TAMPA
may aid the union in having dogs. Well, this was too much
FALLONE, GATELY, HILL,
rated men discharged from the for the boys, and when the agent
MACE, RUNGE, RUTKOWSK^
SAVANNAH
Have been doing quite a bit Arnied Forces so that they may opened the hall the next day,
SIVCO, WEINBERG.
of shipping in this part of the sail again: Frank Grief, Book low Eoid behold there was Casey
Nothing much to report from Crew of S.S. Frielinghausen
South for the past week, it No. 642 has shipped on the SS and his gang back on the beach
this
port for this week. Some of have transportation money doe
seems like old times to be busy Banvard, This Brother was in to haunt him again, thoroughly
the
old-timers
have been drift­ providing they call for it within
again.
trip
the U. S. Army for about two disgusted with their first
ing
In
here
the
last couple of 15 days at the Mobile office of
A nunrber of the Tampa boys years, land he has been doing to the big city.
weeks
from
New
York
and Bal­ the Waterman Steamship Com­
that have been gone for nine everything to get his release so Brother Gillis, our temporai-y
months or more are returning that he could sail again. Brother dispatcher, was accosted by one timore for a little vacation be­ pany.
to the land of sunshine and Joseph Flannagan and yours of the Winos for a four bit fore shipping out again. It's good
Chew which made the last
orange trees so that they may truly both wrote the customary itouch, and he immediately broke to see so many of the old faces trip on the S.S. Robert Hunter
^indulge in their favorite past letter to him, stating that there out his pay slip and stated that around the hall once again. Am has coming the difference in
time, namely taking their siesta was an acute shortage of Able the agent bad already cut him expecting a new Liberty ship for transportation from Wilmington
and servasa in the shade of the Bodied Soanien, and had the out of 20% and on top of that South Atlantic out around the to Savannah. Collect Bull Line,
palm trees.
said letters notarized. We also he was nicked 35c for social se- 4th or 6th of August. Have a New York City.
One of the boys that had made had a letter from the Bull Line, cuiity, and the bartender and few men registered here on the
a trip^ as an Otdinary seaman but none of this, according to his wife and children of his pri­ shipping list but expect I will be Crew which made the last
fOr ahnost nine months was re­ Brother Grief, did him any good; vate tap room were looking for­ needing more men with ratings trip on the S.S, Panama City
fused lan AB" certificate by the ;as he was a Technical Sergeant ward to his continued support, in all departments to get a crew have $125 attack bonus coming,
fkdiectj Waterman Line, 19 Rec­
inspector. So I called the RfvfO jon an Aviny Mine Sweeper. aiso the Profpssor at the Barber for her.
CHARLES WAID, Agent tor Street, New York City.
and tried to get them to help Ptowever on January 29th, 1M3, College was looking for a cut in

MONEY DUE

it,.-

i ^ '

�TBB SEAFARSB8 LOG

Faffe Four

-—

1
Ic h'i^ -,

i '

i;

WSLT Labor Board Set Straight

ITF Workers
Help Topple
Mussolini

Honor Roll

— An Editorial —

I'lii?--

m;-

J 'iTt - •

'il
w.

;Xri.

Seamen And Their Struggle

(Continued from Page 1)
Marine Ck&gt;nferehce to adopt an
"International Load line" to
prevent the nefarious practice
of overloading and carrying up­
f SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
per deck cargoes, sending rotten
Atlantic &amp; Gulf District
vessels to sea and compelling
sailors to live in forecastle
,
AFFILIATED WITH THE AMERICAN fEDERATION OF LABOR
berths that are unsanitary.
(Continued from Page 1)
1891—Urged laws making ves
National War Labor Board Case No. 956
National War Labor Board and
mands
and to gather these de­
National War Labor Board I Case No. 3946—CS-D sel liable to damage suits for mands and actions into a move­
National War Labor Board I
extreme cruelty and inhuman
In the matter of
brutality of officers; condemned ment directed against the entire
New England Steamship Company
injurious law known as "The fascist regime. Milan, Turin and
and
Shipment of Crews in the Coast Naples are the centers of labor
l^afarers Internationa! Union
wise Trade;" protested against resistance. Secret meetings of
of North America, A. F. of L.
the leadership of the under­
The following chart shows the scale of wgaes as paid in the Great Lakes District 4Utid subsidy to a steamship company ground movement in Milan are
until it complies with provisions
by the New England Steamship Company as compared with those paid by the War Depart­ of
attended by delegates from other
the Marine Subsidy Bill.
ment to the U. S. Army Engineer civilian employees on dredges, tow boats and various other
towns and districts."
types of small craft. These boats operate in the harbors of Boston, Providence, R. L, New 1892—Demianded inclusion of
FASCIST COUNTERSTEPS
i'
Bedford, Mass., New York, Philaddphia and most of the other Important harbors in the seamen in aJlen contract law
INEFFECTIVE
favored
abolition
of
advancing
L
country.
A
number
of strikes helped to
wages
to
seamen,
which
wouW
r
These employees of the Army Engineers, in addition to the pay shown on the chart, refocus the attention of the work­
stop
"Crimping
System."
C
ceive subsistence and quarters aUowances which amount to 3372.00 per year. They also re­
ers as yet passive, on the grow­
ceive an annual vacation of 26 days with pay and subsistence and quarters allowance. lEey 1893—Protested against sailors ing power of the revived trade
in
the
foreign
trade
being
given
are also allowed 15 days sick leave annually which is cumulative.
insufficient food, some worse imlon groups. Strikes took place
July 13, 1943
than prison fare, making scurvy in Milan, Turin, Naples, Trieste,
(New England more prevolant in American and the mining districts of
(Great Lake)
(U. S. Army Engineers)
S.S. Co
ships, imprisonment for sean^en Istrla. Circulation of underA
B
O
E
0
who leave an Americmi ship in grotmd literature and papers
an American port means invol­ grew enormously. Acts of sabot­
.56 in 56
56 in 56
40 in 48
48 in 48
56 in 56
Span of Work Hours
untary servitude, and is con= age also occurred in Padua. Pola,
2136.00
1308.00
1671.87
2057.04
1270.32
rary to the U. S. Constitution Bologna, Piacenza, Orlglia SarAble Seaman Year
onno, Genoa, and other import­
178.00
109.00
105.86 and to human right.
139.32
171.42
(30.32)"
Month
41.07
25.15
32.15
- 39.59
. 24.43
1894—Requested John Bums, ant centers.
Week
The Italian underground pa­
5.84
5.04
5.68
3.49 in his tour of the U. S., to tell
5.36
c
Day
.63
.67
.71
.44 of the condition of the seamen per i"Italia Libera" reported In
f
Hour
.95
.00
.95.80 and the necessity for immediate detail on the strike disturbances
.87*
Overtime ....
in Turin, which affected prac56 in 56
40 in 48
48 in 48
56 in 56
56 in 56 action by Congrpss. Two dele­
Span of Work Hours
gates were sent to Washington ically all industrial and arma­
2116.00
1368.00
1744.80
2165.80
1405.76 to look after seamen's bills.
Oiler
Year
ment plants in that city. Ail
178.00
114.00
145.40
180A8
117.15
(31.40)"
Month
1895 — Seamen's Bill became ascist efforts to suppreiss these
41.07
26.31
33J57
27.03 aw but did not give all relief manifestations proved unavail41.65
Week
» 3.86 desired. Denounced proposed ng. Hundreds of workers were
, .
5.87
5.27
5.58
Day
5.97
1
Hour
.49 amendment to shipping act of arrested and their families ter­
.66
.70
.75
.95
.00
.80 1895 permitting allotment to rorized. The despairing regime
'.
Overtime
,91*
IDl56 in 84
40 in 48
56 in 56
63 in 84 original creditor, and that sea­ also took action against its own
Span of Work Hours
48 in 48
men shall forfeit their clothing creation, the compulsory labor
2676.06
First Cook
Year
1728.00
2698.202182.80
1678.00 'or non fulfillment of any con- ascist unions, and arbitrarily
144.00
(37.90)"
Month
181.90
224.85
139.83 ract to work on a~vessel of the removed many of their head®,
Week
33.23
41.97
51.93
32.27 U. S. which would make them among them the leader of the
6.65
Day
7.00
4.61 he helpless victims of the ascist railwaymen's union.
7.42
, .
.92
Hour
.83
.51 crimps. Anti-crimp law enacted
.88
.93
A FASCIST COMMENT
J)0
Overtime
.80 and proved a blessing to seamen.
1.09*
1.24The Turin fascist daily
1896—Urged enactment of a "Stampa" published on June 22
Span of Work Hours
46in84
40 in 48
48 in 48
56 in 56
63 in 84
law
prohibiting undermanning he following revealing commen­
Fbrter
Year
... 1656.00
948.00
1233.84
1504.68
960.12
of
vessels
on the Great Lakes. If tary on the party purge and the
(23.82)"
Month
79.00
80.01
102.82
125.39
it
continues
the Great Lakes will baste with which the members
Week
...
31.84
18.23
28.96
18.47
23.72
be
prevented
from supplying are dropping out of the once all•
Day
4.55
3.65
3.95
2.64
4.14
competent
seamen
for our Navy powerful organization. "The fas­
Hour
.57
J52
.46
.29
.49
in
case
of
emergency.
cists whose membership cords
•V
Overtime
.95
.00
.80
.68
.68
1898—Declared that while sea­ are withdrawn . . . are no long­
(") Represents difference between, monthly rate found in men appreciated the law enact­ er a number but have become a
column B and C. These are government figures. Monthly ed by the last (Congress, they legion. Someone who is likely
rate in colum B is computed after this amount has been still wanted that most dear of » know told us: 'To be a mem­
all human rights — Liberty, to ber of the party Is perhaps more
deducted from monthly rate in column C.
(*) Overtime rate of pay for the first eight hours worked ownership of their own bodies, dangerous than to be outside it.
and should be granted full per­ One no longer knows what atafter the straight time of 40 hours.
sonal
freedom and full protec- tude to take; everywhere there
(-) Overtime rate of pay for the first eight hours worked
tibn
of
the wages signed for. Al­ is suspicion and diffidence . . ,
after the straight time of 48 hours.
so declared new law still con­ As there is no castor oil avail­
tained provisions to imprison able, the days of the cudgel are
for violation of contract and the approaching. In fact, the cud­
old evil, the allotment to credit­ gel is already at work'."
ors. While in session the con­
vention received a telegram that otherwise, compelled to labor
47A0
S S A. BURKE
the seamen's bill had passed against his will except as a pen­
D. L. SEWELL
both houses, but that the alty for crime; we demand this;
... 20.00 amendment striking out the im­
W. BRANDBOKE
has been bought with blood,
.. 16.00 prisonment clause had been lost. and we shall be satisfied with
&gt;' All Amerina rejoiced over the capitulation of Mussolini except M. J. NEGRETTI
,. . 16.00 The convention declared; "While nothing less."
C. A. GAMEL
Wall Street,
it is a good step in the right di­ Next week I'll continue with
The news of the downfall of Italy's dictator "was construed in
rection, it does not give to sea­ other material on ,the struggle
. 16.00
W. E. DENSMORE
financial quarters as another broad step toward victory," says an
men that full freedom to quit carried on by Andrew Puruseth,
.. 16.00 work at will and move freely and the action that was taken
F. WILLINGHAM
Associated Press dispatch, and las a result stocks dropped from $1
S S BANARD
from place to place which is the at the conventions of the Am­
to $5 a share.
. .. 11.00 inalienable natural right of man, erican Federation of Labor.
S S UNICO
This is a curious phenomenon.
y. ivTFnnAfTGfr
10.00 and without which freedom
loses its meaning and becomes
If good news from the war fronts is bad news for Wall Street S S LOUIS JOLIET ... ... 8.29 an empty phrase; and we there­
there can be only one reason—fear of losing fat war profits. Since NORFOLK
fore desire to reiterate the po­
8.00 sition taken by previous conven­
war industries are working almost entirely for the Government, C. BAILEY
... 5.00 tions, that under our flag no
these inflated profits are being made at the expense of the people O. KARLBURN
4.00 man, be he seaman, a mechanic,
J. P. HART
of the United States. We submit that it is up to Congress to re. 4.00 or a farm laborer, either on the
G. LAVDOR
Eoove this incentive to disloyalty from the pockets of the spccu- E. BANRS
mainland, in Hawaii or in any ARTHUR J. DWYER—P 8823
^tors and profiteers.
other possession of the United Earl Esco .......7, .. . .G-1
—American Federation of labor
..$246.39 States, shall be by contcaot or Raymond Martinez ... P 8519
TOTAL
(Continued from Page 1)
SUBMITTED BY

Incentive To Disloyalty

f

IVidajr, Anffost 6, 1M9

lif^
•

•

..V.S

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ITF WORKERS HELP TOPPLE MUSSOLINI&#13;
ANTI-STRIKE BILL INVOKED FOR MINERS&#13;
WAR LABOR BOARD SET STRAIGHT ON 'NEW ENGLAND' PROVOCATIONS&#13;
SEAMEN AND THEIR STRUGGLE AGAINST EXPLOITATION AND GOVERNMENT REPRESSION&#13;
STRIKE VOTE TAKEN BY RAIL UNIONS&#13;
NMU'S CHECK-OFF MOVE ENGINEERED BY LEADERS FEARFUL OF RANK &amp; FILE&#13;
THIS IS A GUIDE TO FREE SPEECH IN PROPER CONDUCT OF A MEETING &#13;
PEGLER IS DENOUNCED AS FOE OF ALL SEAMEN&#13;
INCENTIVE TO DISLOYALTY</text>
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                    <text>VtS&gt;'',cr

SEeSRITY

IN
UNITY
VOL. V.

^ABERS JOC}
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
NEW YORK, N. Y., FRIDAY, AUGUST 13, 1943

M7

No 20

Details Of New Victory S.I.U. CREWS LAUDED
Ship Are Revealed By FOR HEROISM AT SEA
Maritime Commission
Despite opposition of certain
sKipowners who care less for the
lives of their crews than for
profits, the Maritime Commis­
sion's plan for replacing Liberty
ship production with the faster
and safer Victory ships is going
through. Last week for the first
time, details of the new Victory
ships were released by Admiral
Howard L. Vicfcery, Vice Chair­
man, U. S. Maritime Commis­
sion, in an article appearing in
the Aug. 9th issue of the Jour­
nal of Commerce.
Here are the pertnent excerpts
from the Admiral's article:
The Martime Commission has
designed a new cargo vessel,
which combines the high speed
of the C-types with many of the
features which ha&gt;jB permitted
such rapid construction of the
Liberty ship. The present sched­
ules, are based upon the con­
struction of tlie new vessels with
. steam turbine propulsion. Util­
ising two different sizes of power
plants, the smaller of whicii de­
velops 6,000 HP, the Victory ship
will have a normal speed of
15-17 knots—compared with the
11-knots of the Liberty.
The new vessel will be 20 feet
longer than its predecessor. The
Victory ship will have increased
beam to insure adequate stabil­
ity, armament and all, without
this sacrifice of carrying capac­
ity.
Among other differences, the
present vessel has two decks
whereas its successor will have
three permitting better utiliza­
tion of holds for the stowage of
the types of cargo most gener­
ally to be carried. In addition.

If'',
i'i-

i't;

The crews of two SIU ships were the object of high praise this week from the
government. Their courage and seamenship while under enemy attack on the high seas
numerous miscellaneous changes
have been made to improve the marked them as true heroes and a credit to the merchant marine and the union to which
working conditions of the ship's they belong.
The men singled out for honor were the crews of the SS Matt W. Ransom and the SS
personnel, ias well as the actual
cargo transporting utility.
•William Wirt. Both crews met
Axis raiders with the odds great­
Although the Victory ship pro­
ly against them, and proved to
gram has been in the making
the hilt that the ordinary work­
for a long time; few vessels will
ing stiff doesn't need a uniform
be In actual service before an­
and a lot of brass hat discipline
other 1,000 Liberties will have
to be a good fighter.
joined the fleet. The length of
The praise these men now re­
the war, obviously, will be the
ceive from the War Shipping
principal factor in determining
Administration is, to say the
how many vessels of the new Shade of the ancient Mariner, One of the most modern and least, ironical. For it is the WSA
type will be constructed; pres­ blow me down mates, but this is attractive union halls in the which (between pats on the
ent schedules contemplate the the tops. Here is the yarn. It
country was opened last week back) sticks knives in their ribs.
delivery of approximately 340
seems that the Stalinist "brain by the SIU-SUP in Wilmington, While these men fight torpedoes
during 1944.
trust" who control the CIO California to care for the ever and dive bombers on the high
seas, the WSA attempts to scut­
unions in marine, especially the increasing traffic in .the port of tle their union security and con­
NMU and the ILWU, are noting Los Angeles. The building is a ditions back home.
that these unions are being fill­ one story brick affair with plen­ The whole rotten anti-union
ed up with youngsters from the ty of large windows to make the policy of the WSA is known to
the seamen all over the world.
WASHINGTON — A minority training schools who ere now interior light and cheerful. It is These men fight the Axis be­
centrally located at 440 Avalon cause they believe that in so do­
union or group of workers can flooding into the industry, while Blvd.
the real seamen and longshore­
ing they are smashing Fascism
cail for a strike vote to be held men are fading out of these
This hall sets a new standard abroad. But they have no illu­
30 days after the government unions, especially 'in the NMU
for maritime labor -and serves as sions that .the crushing of Ger­
has been given notice of a labor where they became sickened by a monument to the efficiency of many and Italy removes ^11 the
dispute, under the Smith-Con- the noise of super-patriotic hot the SUP and the fast growing enemies of labor — they know
that they have another fight on
nally Act, Attorney General Bid- air. made by chairwarmers on Pacific district of the SIU.
high salaries, riding on the
their
hands back home after
die has ruled.
A gala opening was held at
backs of their members who
the
foreign
war has been won.
the hall last week, and union
This ruling was made on a were out there doing the saiiing
They
know
that this second
and maritime leaders through­
fight
for
democracy
will be
question presented by the NLRB. -^nd the dying.
out the state attended. The
waged
against
the
shipowners
What
to
do?
Ah,
what
to
do?
Biddle's answer caused the
boards literally groaned with
and swivil chair brass hats In
NLRB to set the first strike vote Having made these two worthies food and liquor and no one left
Washington who now pat them
Curran and Bridges, arm chair hungry (or thirsty).
to be held under the new law admirals and generals and 2nd
on the head from time to time
for Aug. 4, in the Allis-Chalmers front experts, as well as labor The building will have a cen­ with one hand, while erecting
Mfg. Co. plant in Springfield, 111. relations experts on all sorts of tral hiring hall and offices for baracades with the other.
Red Snow, SUP agent and Bill We don't reject these words of
The strike vote was requested CP hatched plans, they had yet
Gries, SIU agent. The MFOW praise merely because they come
by District 50 of the United Mine another job for them. This time,
will also have an office in the from the WSA. These crews
Workers union (unaffiliated) af­ it is to beguile and entertain the
building.
have earned this recognition
youngsters.
They
have
discover­
ter the NLRB had dismissed its
and
accept it as their just due.
ed
the
great
musical
(sic)
tal­
Congratulations and smooth
petition to be designated as the
But
we cant help but observe
ents
of
Bridges
and
Curran
who
saiiing
to
Wilmington
from
the
collective bargaining represen­
Atlantic
coast.
(Continued on Page 4)
tative of the workers.
(Continued on Page 2)

Hot Lips Joe We Open New
Gives Out
Union Hall
With Flute In Calif.

Minority Union
Can Ask Strike

• - These pictures illustrate the main steps in the
conversion of sea water into drinking water by a
process perfected by the Navy. Equipment consists
•of two plastic processing bags, both of which con­
tain filters. In the first picture on the left a sea­
A,.:

man squeezes the upper jmrtion of the bag, con­
taining sea water and a filter sack. This disperses
chemical in the water and removes the salt. In
the center picture the saltless water is transfered into the second bag for the purpose of remov­
ing the sodium. After the second bag has been

squeezed and the sodium removed, the water is safe
to drink. It possesses a sulfur taste, but no seaman
is going to kick about that in the middle of the
ocean. The hitch is that this equipment has not
been placed aboard merchant ships but is restricted
to the Navy. Don't ask us why.

�TaC S£AFAI^£RS LOG

Fage Two

t'•••
Ii
I}

SEAFARERS LOG
Ptiblhhed by the

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

HARRY LUNDEBERG

------ Pre^dent

110 Market Street, San Francislro, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

------- Secy-Trer^,

P. Oi Box 2 J, Station P., Now York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Rep.
424 5th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.

Directory of Branches
ADDRESS

BRANCH
NEW YORK (4)

I• •

PHONE

2 Stonfi St.*

Deck &amp; Engine Dispatcher. . BOwling Green 9-3430
Steward Dispatcher
BOwling Green 9-6786
Agent
BOwling Green 9-3437
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave;
Liberty 4067
BALTIMORE (2)..
14 North Gay St.
.Calvert 4539
PHILADELPHIA
6 North eth St
Lombard 7651
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
...Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS (16) . .. 309 Chartres St
Canal 3336
SAVANNAH
218 East Boy St
Savannah 3-1728
TAMPA
436 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St
Diel 8-1392
PUERTO RICO
....45 Ponce de Leon
Puerto de Tlerm
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-8043
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway. .Ft. Lauderdale 1601

PUBLICATION OFFICE:
ROOM 215, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8346

New Witholding Tax
On Wages Is Explained
^

I

By Theodore Thomson
f
|i .

(The following article was printed several weeks ago, and is
now begpg repeated for the bepelit of men who have just returned
from sea. AU Agents should clip, this story and put it on the
bulletin boards.)
From the 1st of July all seamen will have 20% "pay as you
go" tax withheld from -their monithly pay.
If you are single you have a monthly basic exemption of $52
before your income is taxed. If you are married your ememption is
$104, and if married and have one child (or another dependent)
your exemption is $130.00.
You also receive exemptions for additional iwrtions of a
month, as follows: for each day over .the 30 day exemption you are
allowed $1.70 if smgle, $3.50 if marriad and 85 cents per day for
each additional dependent.
Suppose you are out for 3 montlis and 16 days. If single your
exemption would run as follows:
3 months at $52.00
16 days at $1.70
Total ex»mpfcion

$156.00
27.20
.$183.20

If your total wages, overtime ahd bonus amount to $735.00 you
would then deduct your exemptloa of $183.33, find;
that $551.80
is the amount taxable. 20% of your taxable income ($551.80) would
be $110.36. Deduct this f rom your total earnings.
Total earaings
20% deduction of taxable portion

$735.00
110.38

To determine Federal Old Age Benefit,, room and board allow­
ance must be added at. the rate of $36 per month, or $1.20 per day.
Thus, 3 months and 16 days
$1.20, is $127.20, add this to your
earnings of $735.00
127.20

Hep Cat Curran Sounds Off
ton work from the orchestra pit. ; from the WSA to put an orches-'
(Continued front Page 1)
The
audiences are all Commies tra on every ship, and that sea­
are now experts on Jazz—^no less.
from the Waterfront Section in men's gear should include mu­
Lovers of music and culture,
sical instruments furnished by
says the Party in its voice the the front row to do the heavy the Company. Instead of cofleo
cheering on all flat notes, knd
Daily Jerker of July 2Srd in a
the general ajssembly are the time, the NMU would sponsor a
column by one Irlike Gold. The
newcomers
to the NMU and the Hep Cat Hour. Picture® of Cur­
NMU headquarters In New York
iniiustry. Each Is ready and ran and Guy Lombardo addges
Is to be turned into a Palace of
to hang in every comer on every;
Jazz. (Likewise Bridges CP squir­ willing to drop their instrument
and play the role of singing NMU ship. Spirit of Progress,
rel cage in San Fran.)
(or is it. a case of giving them
From now on it's "Hep Cat" waiter.
circuses?)
Curran and silver toned Guy Hear Curran sing "You made
All oldtiihe seamen must be
Lombardo Bridges, the great 'me what I am today" while
forever
grateful for the "discov­
looking
at
Ray
for
direction.
Commie "leaders" of maritime
ery"
by
the Communist Party of
Beautifully
rendered;
enough
to
workers. Visualize them, esi&gt;ecially Ham Head Curran who wring tears from the eyes of the the latent musical genius laying
knows as much about culture as Old Timers now out of the NMU dormant under the homely
he does about the inscription on who know the score. Stein phsiogs of Curran and Bridges.
the Ro.sefcta Stone. As lor sings "Every little bit added to Prom now on—all will be sweet­
Bridges, his fame Eis^a lover has what you got." Ah, a gala eve­ ness and light, men will refuse
reached us, but music wasn't ning. What culture, what zest, to think and will remain satiswhat verve. Rachmaninoff, Beet­ fled with Communist displays
mentioned.
Hep Cat Curan, the old rug hoven, Shubert, would pale with enough to stay in the Union and
cutter and his orchestra. Cin'-^ envy at the musicianship of this pay dues to the Commies, in­
ran playing his favorite instru­ newly discovered talent. The stead of following the old time
ment, the flute. Myers sounding new recruits will be forever NMU members out of the
off on hi.s tooter. Stein trying to drawn to the NMU (with enough "union'-' as they are doing now.
play a half dozen instruments suitable girl Communist talent Yes, and by the looks of it they
at once. Smith on the trombone, as an added attraction). Ah, will go a hell of a lot faster
Lawrenson ;on the drum, Mc- youth, ah glorious musical de­ from now on or we miss ou?
Kenzie on his zylophone, with light. What muscians.
guess.
the score written by Browder, We can see Curran in the near
—Top An' lifl)
and Tommy Ray doing the ba­ fiiture derrianding an agreement

ORDER ON ALIEN
SEAMEN EXTENDED

Seamen And Their Struggle
Against Exploitation And
The War Shipping Adminis­
tration has extended its restric­ Government Repressions
tions against the employment of

seamen of certain nationalities
on vessels of United States,
Panamanian or Honduran reg­
istry to include Fi-ench nationals
not employed as seamen on such
shipsxin or before June 1 of this
year, and Chinese nationals not
so employed on or before July
15, "except when their einploy=
ment Is requested by the Re­
cruitment and Manning Organi­
zation and from the properly ac­
credited consular representation
of the nation involved."
The order, issued as a revision
of Supplement No. 2 to General
Order No. 5, brings to a total of
ten the nationalities iaffected by
current restrictions on the em­
ployment of alien seamen.
Others, named in previous WSA
orders in March and April, in­
cluded Dutch, Norwegian, Bel­
gian, Greek, British, Yugoslav
and Polish nationals not so em­
ployed on or before April 8, and
Brazilian nationials not. so em­
ployed on or before Februaiy 1.
The new ruling change® the
former qualifying clause, which
read "except by consent of a
properly accredited consular rep­
resentative of ittie nation in­
volved," by specifying that, in
each case a special request must
be issued by the Recruitment
and Manning Organization."

R. (K MCDONALD

Get in.'touch with Marie;^80&amp;
Dauphiiie
St., New Orleaiuk It
862.20 1% of which ia $8.62; so. your final compu­
is
very
important.
tation would be as follows:

llffr

m
^

Total £amittgs
"Pay as you go" tax

$735.00
110.36

Social Security Tax,

624.64
8.62

Net Wages

$616.02

Friday, August 13, IMS

R. THOMPSON, 2873
Next time you are in New
York see Claude Fisher, Steward
Patrolman.

keep In Touch With
Your Local Draft Board.

By Matthew Dushane^
(Following is chapter two of a scries of articles on early maritime,
struggles led by Andrew Furuscth and the AFL.)
Legislation: Continuing the^
fight that was led by Andrew versal of that system, to the ex­
Furuseth for seamen's rights, tent of this law, we shaU see
here is the action that was within a reasonable time the ab­
solute abolution of the systemtaken at the conventions of the
of involuntary servitude under
American Federation of Labor.
which the seamen have b^n,
1899
and are, in the foreign trade
President reported gains made
still suffering."
^
through the seamen's new law.
1900
He said, "The law does not
Protested
against
more than."
grant all that was asked, but in
one
cargo
carrying
vessel
being
American ports, the ports of
British possessions of North Am­ towed at one time unless they
erica, Newfoundland, the West are capable of taking care ctf
Indies and Mmcico, it abolishes themselves at sea, under sail or
imprisonment for desertion from steam. "We believe that there iB
vessels and does not permit of no hope of miaterially increasing
their being arrested and com­ the number of native seamen 08
pelled to go on board of a vessel long as those in our merchant:
and to work against their will. marine still are subject in a for­
It provides" that the sums of eign port to involuntary servi­
wages due to seamen not ex­ tude.
1901
ceeding $106.00 can be sued for
The
Commissioner
of Navisstr .
undoes smauary proceedings' To.
tion
said
there
is
no
provtstonia majovGy of the crew exclu^ve
of
law
empowering
any
officer
of the officers, is granted the
right to demand a survey in any of the government to regifintft
American vessel in American the numbei- of vessels in tow,
ports. An improved scale of peo- although the matter was refesed;
vl«ioBs. was adopted. The crimp­ to in the report- of the bareou
ing system, altbough not entire­ for 1868; that the chances for
ly abolished, was modified by the passage of any legislation,
reducing the possiUe allolmmit upon the subject would depeopi
to mdmps. It also gives the sea­ to an extent upon "A, speoffi©
men the right to quit work at statement of the losses of bor^'
any time, and for any reason and their crews." Exeeutlw
suffi«^U^t to himself, in any council instructed to iiifonn
0^' tbo United States. It President of the U. S. that tiwafc^ves to him immunity in the ifis with foreign countries; per­
U, Si from bring brought on any mit involuntary servitude for
vessel agrinst his wilt It re­ seamen. Und^manning of: yeaduces .the evils of the crimping sels is drivir® native seamOB;
system Hsy one half; It provides from the sea.
1908
fur saiuuiaify- proceeding These
Condemhed praetiee of brllilih
am good st^ps. in the rigfit dHrectton, but by no means, suffi­ Ing Chiaamw frcun China and;
cient. It is also a partial rever­ placing them on American "Ves­
sal of a policy which has existed sels. , Legislative committee had
in our country since 1793; name­ defeated attempt toTestore pro­
ly; treating the seamen as serfs; visions of the old law denytog
and we may feel assured that right of seamen to quit, thOlT
by having entered, upon the re­
(Continued on, Page. }).
^

�L'AE SEAFARERS LOO

Faee Ibreo-

•r

SeatnenAnd Their Struggle

WHAT'S EOmO

from remaining there to tho
{^Continued from Page 2)
employment even when a vessel detriment of our merchant ma­
is in a safe harbor. Demanded rine and the serious danger to
repeal of treaties permitting in­ our national safety and prestige;
voluntary servitude; repeal of asked amendment of the pilots
law prohibiting licensed officers age laws of Virginia which com­
MOBILE
NEW ORLEANS
BOSTON
in the merchant marine from pel vessel owners in the coast­
leaving their employment; op­ wise trade to pay pilot fees alThings are still just barely posed ship subsidy bill because thouh no service is performed
Recently there appeared at It has been the contention of
the Boston office a young chap this organization ever since the making the grade down here. it was calculated to extend the by pilots or deemed necessary.
who asked if he could join" our inception of the Maritime Com­ Pew ships, plenty of men, plenty transportation monopoly now
1907
of squawks and still plenty of held by the railroads on land in­
We
note
with
pleasure the de­
imion as he had heard we had mission, that it was nothing the old fashioned chislers by
to and over the sea •without in feat of the anti-pilotage bill. Its
better conditions, better crews, more or less but machhiery to the companies.
any way helping to develop a defeat is in the interest of the
and more harmony on board eliminate the maritime unions The pay off for the week was rfative or naturalized body of safety of life and property at
from the field. The ship oper­ a new Waterman ship showed American Seamen.
ships under our jurisdiction.
sea. We freely admit that the
law as it stands works a discrim­
After questioning him to some ators will stop at nothing to re­ up to start the week and the
1903
men on deck got very very in­ Arresting and returning to ination against sailmg vessels hi
vert
back
to
the
old
fink
days.
length I was told the following:
sulted because of the fact that
favor of the steam vessels, but
He was 20 years old, an Am­ To stubstantiate my argument the ship wds not built, or rather their respective vessels such sea­ hold that the proper way to
men
as
deserted
is
contrary
to
erican by birth, and had applied I will just give you a little cita­ rigged, to fit all hands at the
Human Liberty; employment of abolish the discrimination is to
to the RMO for a berth on an tion of how the W.S.A. functions. present time. The crew and the
inexperienced men as seamen restore compulsory pilotage as
American vessel. The RMO ship­ Tuesday July 27, 1943 the S.S. gun crew just could not seem to
has caused large loss of life; regards steam vessels. A proper
ped him on a Panamerican ves­
get together about who ate Congress should enact a law regard for the life of passengers,
was scheduled to sign
sel as coal burning fireman for
when. The result that after a giving all seamen full right to leaving the crew out of consid­
$65.00 per month with the prom­ articles for parts &amp; ports im- few drinks the men called the
quit work in any safe harbor; eration, demands nothing less.
ise that if he sg,iled on her for 6 known. The crew demanded a hall and ordered replacements.
Reaffirmed demand for law abol­
months they would get him U. S. transportation letter back to riie I pointed out to the men that Urged Congress to prohibit tow­ ishing imprisonment for seamen
ing of more than one vessel not
Seamen's papers and they would port in the Gulf like all other they would have to stay put un­
capable of being managed un­ who quit work in a foreign port.
permit him to sail on his own ships out of this port. The com­ til we found out whether or not
der its own power; those that
1908
U. S. ships. Well, he made one pany refused to sign the letter that we could get replacemente.
cannot
be
managed
alone
are
Demanded
laws to prevent
trip on her which lasted two with the statement that the They promised that if the re­
known
as
coffins.
We
demand
further
deterioration
of the
months and came to the con­ W.S.A. would not permit them placements were not down there the same individual and person­
U.
S.
merchant
marine
similiar
to
go
for
any
thing
else
but
clusion that any sane person
tliat they would sail the ship al freedom for seamen that is
to
the
English—i.€.:
No
person
Regulation
No.
64
of
the
W.S.A..
would go* insane If they made a
i-ather then put the union in a enjoyed by other workers; we
to
be
signed
as
an
able
seaman
second trip. Also he wished to Now for the benefit of every­ spot. Result that after a few
protest against a continuation unless he has served at least
know from me why it was that body concerned this regulation more heaves on the back splice
of a system of contracts to work three years on deck at sea, must
his government did not think No. 64 was drafted by a bmich they all returned to the ship and
that are enforcable by impris­ be a citizen and have a suffici­
him good enough to permit him of high pressure lawyers in packed up them gear and va­
onment as degrading to the sail­ ent knowledge of the English,
to sail on a TJ. S. merchant ves­ Washington, and by all accounts moosed.
ors and dangerous to other language to understand orders
sel and yet talked him into it took them three months to This at sailing time with the workers.
on board. Reaffirmed demand
signing on a Panamanian vessel. draft it—^which may be a smart
result that the company natur­
for abolition of involuntary ser­
1904
I told him the best way to find job, I lam not commenting on ally called the RMO and sailed
vitude of American seamen in
Renewed
demands
for
laws
out was to ask the United Fruit that phrase of the picture. I the ship about four Hours later.
foreign
ports. Condemned law
governing
rafts.
Undermanning
Co. or his Congressman and as wiU admit that ever since Pearl This is the sort of reports that
delegatmg
to the inspection ser­
of
ships
has
caused
great
loss
of
an American citizen he had a Harbor, when labor gave the the M.C. and C.G. the Navy and
vice
the
power
of determining
life
and
Congress
should
pro­
right to know.
pledge to the President that it all the other bureaus like to
the
number
of
officers
and men
hibit
this
reckless
gambling
with
Here is an example of our gov­ was waiving all rights to strike compile and send in reams of
to
be
employed
on
steam
vessels
human
lives.
Demanded
treat­
ernment crying for seamen to for the duration, the industrial stuff on. Just a few more of
as
it
does
not
provide
standards
ies
be
amended
to
prevent
own­
man "New Liberty Ships" and Giants got busy immediately these things are needed to real­
of skill, language or numbers
when our earnest youth apply, with all of their stooges in ly put the ax to the men that ership of one man by another.
by which inspectors are to be
the same government acts as a Washington to push labor back are sailing the ships. All this
1906
guided.
shipping master for another on its heels and they have done took place on a new ship that
Condemned the disregard of
government in supplying youth­ a very good job of it too.
came here from MobUe. It seems human life as practiced by some
ful American citizens to, work Getting back to ' the Robin to me that this crew, if things vessel owners who often' send
under coolie conditions and scab Line Liberty ship and the trans­ were all that bad, could and one steam vessel to tow a num­
wages. Yet year after year they portation letter, both sides back­ should have notified the Mobile ber of heavily loaded barges
- send a representative to some ed and filled arounded for two branch, instead of waiting for which spmetimes are cut adrift,
labor conference, at Geneva or days and on Thursday morning, sailing day to start a beef.
and the helpless seamen find a
London with instruction to bring July 29, the W.S.A. ordered the
A little trouble on one of the watery grave. Endorsed^ bill to
before representatives of other shipping commissioner down to
prohibit inefficient and insuffi­
governments ways and means to the ship at 10 a.m. to sign the ships with a colored stewards cient crews on passenger vessels,
FRANK GREEN—G-52
increase safety at sea and high­ ship on. The W.S.A. informed department. Around sailing time lack of which caused three dis­
WILLIE SMITH
er wages for seamen so that the crew that they would have it's been the habit here lately astrous wrecks and loss of life
WILLIE NELSON
American shipowners will not to sign Regulation No. 64' or else, for these gents to get off the In New York harbor, San Fran­
LEROY LANNON
be compelled to compete under and the crew just informed ship and we have been forced to cisco Bay and off Vancouver Isl­
issue
trip
cards
to
quite
a
num­
JAMES
THOMPSON
such disadvanbagious competi­ them that it was else, and for
and; employment of Chinese on
tion as practiced by foreign them to go right ahead and get ber of men to sail the ships. This American vessels declared vio­
LEROY GREEN
shipowners. It reminds m^ of themselves a mew of factory time the only men that sailed lation of the exclusion law; de­
JOSE
HERNANDEZ
the ship were the steward and
the story of "Finky Lou," but sailors.
manded
laws
to
prohibit
over­
A VOSB
the 2nd cook, the rest of the
that's another story.
Now every single person that dept. was filled out. with the loading of vessels. The freedom
R
SHEDDEN
r have good news for Brothers was involved in the beef very Filipino boys, who, once they get won by other workmg people has
Armstrong and Wallace. At long frankly admitted that the crew a ship, hold on pretty good. So been denied seamen, leaving M. McCONNELL
P. G. NOVAK
last they can expect to receive was one hundred per cent right we can look for this ship now to them to involuntary servitude;
they
have
been
forbidden
the
the packages of Roach exterm­ in their demand, but W.S.A. be a solid Filipino ship. Tliis
ANDRES CORTES
inating powder that was prom- would not permit the company may teach a needed lesson to right to combhie to obtain in­
ANTHONY ONORATO
creases in wages -to correspond
ise&lt;i them at the last Geneva to sign anything else but regu­ those who need it.
S. CRAWFORD
with those of men of equal skill,
Conference. With 4 foot of water lation No. 64. Now this Regula­
ARTHUR J. DWYER—F 8823
in our Galveston Hall I wonder tion No. 64,' in the Preamble the We have a couple of very nice thus making it impossible for
looking
halls
on
the
string
here
G-1
them to marry, preventing boys Earl Esco
what Brother Wallace intends to instructions to General Agents,
so expect to have something from seeking the sea and men
do with his package.
Raymond
Martinez
...
P 8619
all Agents are to, use their dis­ definite to submit to the mem­
I was seriously thinking of cretion on the using of Regula­ bers very shortly.
putting Brother Dushane on my tion No, 64 as a rider, but they
KEEP CLEAR WITH YOUR DRAFT BOARD
ARMY, Agent
moiling list as I understand did not allow them to use them
some Washington offices are in­ discretion In this case. So it's
By observing the following simple instructions you will
very obvious that as far as the
fested with Roaches.
continue to receive deferment from military service. Fail
to observe these rules and you may wind up in the army.
I see where Jimmy Corfue is Statement of Principles is con­
»
making another trip on the cerned the W.S.A. doesn't have
WHEN SIGNING ON; Give the clerk or skipper all the
same ship as steward and all the any idea of living up to it. If
information
neeessary to fill out RMO Card No. 47 (Green
Wallace Sweat, G-58, signed
stewards dept. are signing on that is not a. violation of the
Card).
again with him, WeU^ such pop­ Statement of Principles, cut my on in Jackstrnville, Florida and
WHEN SIGNING OFF: See that Card No. 48-A is propsigned off in New York. He is an
ularity must be deserved, land by legs off and call me shorty.
perly
filled out by skipper or clerk.
the way, J.unmy, Mayor Tobin The RMO put a crew aboard anti-union performer and re­
of Boston certainly enjoyed your and the good old ship, sailed fused to pay his dues. Be cer­
Ship out before your allotted time ashore has expired.
that., way.
stories.
If
you
have not yet filled out the Green Card, contact your
tain that he doesn't ship on an
draft board and let them know that you are sailing.
JOHN MOGAN, Agent
OLDEN BANKS, Agent SID vessel.

Ammnd the Jl^rts

T
"

- i.

••i

Attention Agents!

Pv
-•..v...... feH %

i-

'd*

•m

�Page Four

Friday, August 13, 1943

THE SEAFARERS LOG

Yard Workers Get Raw Deal S.LU. CREWS LAUDED
On Wages; Continue Fight
{Continued from Page 1)

I

that when labors' enemies are
Unions in the shipbuilding RELIED ON "F.D.'s" PROMISE forced to say such things—the
Uiiluu representatives made case must be overwhelntog.
industry are not giving up ifchelr
the
sacrifice on the promise
The iWSA letter on the Matt
battle for wage increases, despite
WAR SHippiNO ADMINISTRATION
of
government
spokesmen
Ransom
is reproduced in the
rejection of their plea by the
V/ASHINOTON
that if the administration
columns at the right. The text
National War Labor Board, it failed to hold the line on
of the WSA letter on the Wil­
was made known this week by prices, wages would later be liam Wirt follows:
AOgUtt t, i9t3
Vice President William A. Oal- adjusted.
^
^vin of the International Broth­ At hearings before the War War Shipping Administration
Washington, D. C.
eenlKrtrs' Int»pnatl#n|il Union
erhood of Boilermakers.
Labor Board several weeks ago,
of Horth Aaorlon
'
^
August 2, 1943
Rooa 213
labor's
spokesman
Insisted
the
A. F. of L. unions in the indus­
e Stona Strnat
Hav yorte City
try had demanded raises for over government fulfill that solemn Seafarers' International Urdon
pledge,
but
the
board.
In
a
de­
of
North
America
a million shipyard workers, equal
Oantlanani
to the advance in the cost of cision issued this week, by an Room 213
Tha Ubarty tUp. S. 8. uiTt W. lUKSCU* Mimed ty '
BMibsra of your Union vaie approaoUne an Afirloan port aritb
living since the spring of 1942, 8-lo-4 vote, denied any general 2 Stone Street
« aaluatla earso of Any auppUaa irttan aha atruok an. aanqr
when present wage rates were increase, claiming it is barred by New York City
alnaa Tha idolant aoq)lofion rippa&lt;i Into har hoira Tha ahlp
the
"Little
Steel"
formula
and
tlraddared undar tha l^aota Oraylah-blaok mtar iraa throan
established at a national ship­
Gentlemen;
cna hundrad faat in tha aira Than a aaoond axploalon folbuilding stabilization conference the administration's stabiliza­
lowad, tha thlp bagan to aattla and finally the abandon ahlp
tion policies. All four labor mem­ The Liberty ship, S.S. WIL­
Order waa glTaua
in Chicago.
bers of the board dissented.
LIAM WIRT, launched July 4,
Rhaa all handa ware aafa in llfahoaiat Captain
At that time, on the urgent
iiataall noted that tha raaaal had eaaaad to aattloa Tilth a
We're keeping up the battle 1942, at Bethlehem - Fairfield
TOluntaer orair of alx nan, ha oUabad to the alanting daok
plea of President Roosevelt and for justified wage adjustments Shipyard, manned by members
of tha raaaal idioaa bow «aa alnoat buried in tha aaa, .. Tha
nan
ra-fl'rad tha bollara and finally tha logy raaaal
other government oflRcials, the despite the decision of the of your Union was the first ves­
undar any aa tha aerena began to turn again. Manned V
unions accepted an 8-cent-an- board," Calvin declared. "Prices sel of the huge allied convoy to
alceleton ore* of four aan abora daok and tan balov, aha pro*
eaadad nithout further inoidant to port and dliohargad bar
hour raise, though they were en­ are still climbing, land the board, dock in tlie historic North Afri­
oargo.
titled to 13 cents under provis­ in fairness to the workers, can't can invasion last November.
Said Captain Mataalli "I gira dradlt to all bmda
ions of their agreements which maintain its arbitrary wage ceilfor their ooolaaaa apd apaoial oradit to Ubarty aUpi ehioh
The U. S. Navy reports that
called for increases in line with mgs forever. At the proper time
gas. atand »n wcpleaion of tMa na^tude and atill ba ahla to
eooa in undar their oim ponar." Tbia aagnifloant job ty tba
the WILLIAM WIRT, last Janu­
the rise in the cost of living.
we will renew our demands."
Mn nho biiilt and aaiiad tha 1U.TT w. SAHSOH haa again hmrad
ary, ran the gantlet of five air
our Aaariota Marohant Marina.
attacks in the Eastern Atlantic
Very truly youra.
and Mediterranean, shooting
down four enemy planes and
Bdaard liaaao^
f
two more "probables." Although
Oapuly Adninlatrator
damaged by near misses and by
a bomb which penetrated to its
Union membership in the United States and Canada was highly inflammable cargo but
placed at an all-time high of 13,000,000 by the Office of War In­ failed to explode, the WILLIAM
WIRT held her position in the
formation this week.
convoy and discharged her cargo
Tlie OWI estimated gains in the past year alone at 1,500,000 on schedule.*
members. Since the bottom of the depression, rolls of the unions
Only by remarkable teamwork
have more than quadrupled.
of the Merchant Marine, officers
A. F. of L. strength was put at close to 6,500,000, C. I. O. at and crew and .the Navy gun
5,000,000, independent railroad brotherhoods, outside of those affil­ crew under fire was this notable
iated with the A. F. of L., at 420,000, and other unaffiliated unions, victory won. More power to you
such as the United Mine Workers, Typographical Union, Brewery an.
Last week Headquarters received a call from one of the 90
Very truly yours.
Workers and various organizations of telephone employes, at
day
wonders asking us to help two of his buddies who were picked1,100,000.
EDWARD MAOAULEY
up by the Navy Shore Patrol at the Rialto Ball Room for imper­
Deputy Administrator
Among the most spectacular advances in the last 12 months
sonating Navy men.
were those scored by the Machinists and various unions in the
This information must be amusing to the old-timers in our
shipbuilding industry, such as the Boilermakers, the OWI report
organization, as they have to tolerate these pseudo mess and
disclosed. These organizations have doubled their strength.
wiper officers running around the ship with their high pressure
hats and uniforms. These maritime trainees have been told on
numerous occasions as soon as they joined the union that they
didn't have to wear those uniforms any longer and that they were
»
no longer under the jurisdiction of the WSA. One bright guy of
One day last week, Edward J. Noble, a business man who once
Large-scale
construction
of
a
17
told us he couldn't get any girls unless he wore the uniform.
eerved as undersecretary of commerce, paid $8,000,000 to the NaAnother
one said that he couldn't walk the streets of New York
new
unsinkable
type
of
lifeboat,
ildonal Broadcasting Company for its Blue Network. This trans­
without
a
uniform or he would be beat up. About 10,000 of our
action raises two or three points worth considering.
which is far superior to the
membens come from New York and we don't see them being beatThe tangible property owned by the Blue Network is probably standard lifeboat at present in up by anybody.
hot worth $500,000. Why pay $8,000,000 for it? Because that will use on ocean-going veiisels, has
AAA.
enable Mr. Noble to control airways which are owned by the people begun in 'British shipyards*^ and
The
old
Robin
tub
that
would makle 6 knots with the wind on
of the United States. Do the people get anything for the use of is making satisfactory progress,
its
tail
finally
came
to
rest
at
the bottom of the sea. Forunately,
the airways? Not a penny. That seems a little rough on the the main office of the Interna­
no
one
was
lost.
One
of
the
Alcoa
C-2's was recenWy lost with no
people, but that's the way things are done nowadays.
tional Transport Workers' Fed­
casualties.
Everytime
Paul
Hall
gets
to Baltimore he has a new
eration in London reports.
Mr. Noble land the interests which put up the $8,000,000 for
Re^utlon for the brothers to ponder over. Two Sundays ago we
him, will be able to whisper their ideas—^thcir propaganda into The main features of the new made a trip on the Hudson Day Liners and when we istepped into
your ear every day and every night for an indefinite period. That's boat are a highly elevated and the Dining Room we thought we were aboard the Acadia as a lot
worth a lot of money to anyone who wishes to influence public enclosed forecastle and poop, of Eastern stiffs were saUing the Day Line ship and working below
opinion in America. It is significant that the names of Mr. Noble's kapok or cork-filled fenders the Union scale. These very same men will be looking for a break
financial associates have not been mentioned up to date.
round the gunwale and extent from the membership when the war is over.
sive storage space for water.
For more than 20 years, this newspaf&gt;ers has been warning Eight large water tanks are fit­
Americans that interests, which are very powerful but not particu­ ted low in the center of the boat.
larly scrupulous, have been moving .steadily toward a certain goal:
They wish to establish, a "vested right" to the people's airways— The new boat, as demonstrat­
and they have almost rea'ched their goal!
ed in exhaustive trials, can be
lowered in smooth weather by
p. MARTINEZ, LEWIS FEARS and Steward have division of
The attempt to regulate them has been largely futile, because a single drop at an angle of 70
wages due. Crew which' uutde
the radio moguls have succeeded in corrupting most of the regu­ degrees, either bow or stern and E. FRIMOS: You have over­
complete
trip has difference of
time
coming
from
the
Bull
Line.
lators.
first, and without shipping any Collect 115 Broad Street, New 'advance money coming. Collect
Calmar Line, New York City.
About the only "out" for the American people is to insist that water. It can also right itself York City.
*
*
»
Uncle Sam establish his own national broadcasting-system, sup­ from.a list of 100 degrees. The
ported out of the Public Treasury. That doesn't mean that the experiments were conducted un­ WILUAM NICHEL has over­
The following men have
privately-owned companies would be put out of business. It does der supervision of the shipping time coming from Calmar Line, money coming from Smith &amp;
mean that the people would have the unrestricted right to use a authorities and witnessed by 39 Broadway, New York City.
Johnson, 80 Broad Street, New^
union representatives who, laud­
part of the airways which they own.
York City: BELLAH, BI^
ed the performance of the new Steward's Department of S.S.
MANN,
BILDE, BLAME, C^This would not be popular with the radio monopolists and boat type.
Frellnghausen has money due
their newspaper backers. Tlie monopolists are prepared to spend
for extra meals. Collect Water FREY, ENGER, FAIRCLOTH,
millions on lobbyists, crooked propagandists and still more crook­
FALLONE, GATELY, HTI.!.,
York City.
Keep lii Touch With man line. New
ed"politicians to block any move looking to reform.
• • •
MACE, RUNGE, RUTKOWSKI4.
—Labor
Your Local. Draft Board. S.S. John Latrope: Chief cook SIVCO, WEINBERG.

Unions At Peak Strength
With 13,000,000 Members

Out of the Focs^l
by

3C~

^AOM, JksL 3Uld)tA, fijtMA,—

i

f-'
•fc

I

!•-'

'

Unsinkable Boats
Being Constructed

MONEY DUE

•»»••

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DETAILS OF NEW VICTORY SHIP ARE REVEALED BY MARITIME COMMISSION&#13;
SIU CREWS LAUDED FOR HEROISM AT SEA&#13;
HOT LIPS JOE GIVES OUT WITH FLUTE&#13;
WE OPEN NEW UNION HALL IN CALIF.&#13;
MINORITY UNION CAN ASK STRIKE&#13;
NEW WITHOLDING TAX ON WAGES IS EXPLAINED&#13;
ORDER ON ALIEN SEAMEN EXTENDED&#13;
SEAMEN AND THEIR STRUGGLE AGAINST EXPLOITATION AND GOVERNMENT REPRESSIONS&#13;
ATTENTION AGENTS!&#13;
YARD WORKERS GET RAW DEAL ON WAGES; CONTINUE FIGHT&#13;
UNIONS AT PEAK STRENGTH WITH 13,000,00 MEMBERS&#13;
UNSINKABLE BOATS BEING CONSTRUCTED</text>
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                    <text>«•

SECURITY
IN
UNITY
VOL. V.

.UT

^J^^ARERS JOQ
OFFICIAL CROAK OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,

1

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
NEW YORK, N. Y.. FRIDAY. AUGUST 20. 1943

No. 21

Crew Gets $7,000 Overtime;
Our Working Rules Are Upheld
WYCKOFF'S SABOTAGE BACKFIRES; SOUTH
ATLANTIC UNE PAYS THROUGH THE NOSE
The South Atlantic Steamship Line must pay 18 SIU men 90 cents an hour overtime for over 7500 hours! This was the de­
cision handed down this week by a U. S. Conciliation Service Referee, Bryce Holcombe, who had been appointed to settle the dis­
pute between the union and the company over the breaking of watches on the S.S. Schoharie when she was waiting for a convoj^
but was not in port. This was an extremely important victory for the union, not only because of the money involved and because
it smashed the shipowner attempt to chisel our contract, but because it gave sharp answer to Mr. Hubert Wyckoff of the Wai^
Shipping Administration who sabotaged a security wztch^s^y, Atlantic Steamship Line
agreement negotiated between the SIU and the operators. Savannah, Ga.
Last May the union negotiated security watch agree­ Gentlemen:
ments with the Mississippi, Waterman and South Atlantic In joint conference July 9th,
Lines—^such agreements designed to meet war time condi­ 1943, at New York, N. Y., your
undersigned representatives have
tions which required security weu. this week he was instru- mutually agreed that pursuant to
watches for ship safety in mental in forcing the South At­ Section 5 of the Labor Agree­
port. In order to conform lantic Steamship Company to pay ment which exists between the
with the rules laid down in through the nose in order to in­ above named Company and
the Security Watch Agree­ dulge his anti-union bias. And Union, the Director of the U. S.
Hubert Wyckoff is also going to
Service shall appoint
ment, the Union agreed to be responsible for many thous­ Conciliation
a referee, whose decision shall be
amend certain working rules and dollars more that will be paid final and binding for the settle­
regulating breaking watches indirectly by the government be­ ment of the Union's wage claim
in all ports. This agreement, cause he sabotaged the security for twenty (20) or less of the
Company's employees, who serv­
negotiated in collective bar­ watch agreement.
Mr.^ Bryce P. Holcombe, Com­ ed aboard the SS "SCHOHARIE"
gaining between the union missioner, U. S. Conciliation Ser­
—said twenty (20) seamen were
apd the operators, was- set vice, was the referee in the dis­ paid their regular wages March
aside in a high handed and pute between the Union and the 12th, 1943.
bureaucratic manner by Mr. South Atlantic Line. His analysis The parties herein named have

pointed Bryce A. Holcombe, to
act as such arbitrator.
The Union states that the fol­
lowing ratings are involved in
this proceeding: Able Seamen,
Ordinary Seamen, Oilers, Watertenders and Firemen.
THE ISSUE
Under date of January 9th,
1941, the Seafarers' International
Union of North America, herein­
after referred to as the Union,
and the South Atlantic Steam­
ship Line, hereinafter referred to
as the Company, entered into a
sole bargaining agreement. This
agreement is still in force.
Specifically, the claim of the
Union is that the members of the
crew of the SS SCHOHARIE
with the ratings heretofore set
forth are entitled to overtime
payment for work performed
outside of their regular watches
when the aforesaid vessel was
detained at. . . . awaiting convoy.
It bases its claim upon the
existing agreement, which has
heretofore been referred to, while
the Company contends that it
has abided by all the conditions
of said agreement that the claim
of the Union is unwarranted and
should be rejected.
It was agreed by the parties
that the matter would be sub­
mitted upon brief.

and decision is so lucid and em­ agreed that they would separate­
inently fair and impartial that ly submit to the U.S. Conciliation
When Wyckoff pulled this fast
we herewith print it in its en­ Service a written brief within
one the Union said, "OK, if that
tirety (eliminating port names the next few days. The Service
Is the way you want it we'll slop
and dates).
shall render its decision based
trying to reach any special agree­
ments for war time and demand PRELIMINARY STATEMENT upon the Labor Agreement and
enforcement of our collective A dispute having arisen be­ the briefs submitted by the par­
bargaining contracts as they tween the parties whose names ties.
stand."
Bryce A. Holcombe.
appear in the above caption, the
Commissioner of U. S.
Because Mr. Wyckoff was a following agreement was entered
Conciliation Service.
smart guy. because he thought he into;
was successfully chiseling the
New York, N. Y.,
(Holcombe's Report continues)
seamen, the South Atlantic Line
July 9th, 1943.
must now shell out close to $7,000
Seafarers' International Union In accordance with the terms
in overtime on one ship. And this
2 Stone Street
of said agreement, the Director,
is only the beginningi
New York, N. Y.
U. S. Conciliation Service, ap­
There are any number of skip­
pers, not only on the South At­
lantic Line ships, who thought
they had the Union over the bar­
rel and they have been sticking
the men with overtime work
without paying for it. They are
going to be called to line—and
quick.
The Journal of Commerce has a new mari­ type which marshalls overwhelming evidence
• Wyckoff no doubt sold his su­
time
editor. Ordinarily this would be an event to prove that while union men may mean well,
periors the idea that he was sav­
of
little
interest to the seamen, but on this oc­ they aren't quite bright and for their own weling the government thousands of
fa^-e the Shipowners must lead them around
casion
it
is something to note.
dollars by chiseling the seamen
One of the requisites for getting a job as with a ring in their nose.
out of their security watch agree­
The new Journal of Commerce maritime
maritime editor op the Journal of Commerce
ment. But the result has been
is the ability to write about unions in such, a editor, one Stanley Ferguson by name, appears
just the reverse. The operating
manner that they appear as a bunch of gang­ to be of the latter school. This week he wrote
costs are going to be much high­
sters intent upon blackmailing the shipowner a long editorial on the question of unemploy­
er now than they would have
out of his hjrd earned, pityfully small profits, ment benefit for seamen. He assured his read­
been had the security watch
and in raping his wife and daughter when his ers that the shipowners have always been in
agreement been allowed to oper­
favor of such insurance for the men, and in
back is turned.
ate,
The Journal of Commerce has had two the present Congressional hearings on the sub­
Mr. Wyckoff, the labor rela­
types of maritime editors in the past. One type ject they are bucking such legislation only
tions Director of the JWSA is the
is
of the blood-and-guts school of journalism because the unions are demanding that the
shining example of a labor-hating
and
attacks the seamen and the unions with a hiring hall be designated as the registration
small-time bureaucrat who
forthrightness
that would do justice to Pegler. headquarters for the men — such a demand
counts no cost too great if it reThe
other
type
is the scholarly and objective
(Continued on Page 3) suits in a blow at the Unions.

WyckoflF.

Journal Of Commerce Gets A New
Maritime Editor—Same Scab Line

•

STATEMENTS OF FACTS

The claim for overtime pay is
asserted on behalf of eighteen
(18) members of the crew of the
SS SCHOHARIE; said voyage
being from the . . . to . . . and
... At. . . the vessel was detain­
ed awaiting convoy. At these
places, • where the vessel was an­
chored to await convoy, th^ Mas­
ter broke watches and the crew
were required to work eight (8)
hours a day from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
CONTENTION OF THE UNION
The Union in support of its
position states that when a ship
is ready to leave port the watches
are set; that when these watches
are set they are, under the terms
of the agreement not to be bro­
ken, that is, they are not to be
set aside either to suit the con­
venience of the Master, until the
vessel arrives "in port".
The Union points out that there
are times when there may very
well be a temptation to break
watches; that such an instance
may occur where the ship arrives
near a port and for some reason
drops anchor; that under such
circumstances the crew might
desire that watches be broken
and the "in port" working rules
put into effect in order that they
might go ashore; that this might
conflict with the Master's plans,
and, of course, the men would
have no right to have watches
broken; that, conversely, in a
similar situation, the Master
might desire to break watches in
order to get more work done. The
Union contends, however, that
the Master under the terms of
the agreement would not be free
to break watches. This, the Union
alleges, is what the Master did in
the instant case.
The Union aserts that the Mas­
ter, sensing that the enforced an-_
chorage might last for an indefin­
ite period of time broke watches
in order to get more work out of
the men, working them between
the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
instead of maintaining the watch­
es as they had been set; that by
keeping watches he could not
have had the seamen, especially
on watch 3 do certain types of
work without the payment of
(Cotttinued on Page 4)

V

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'

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�rK£:i^»£ AFAR EES

' Page Two

111'I

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

15?.

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

HARRY LUNDEBERG

- - - - - - President

110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

------- Secy-Treas.

p. O. Box 25, Station P., New York Gty

MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Rep,
424 5th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.

Directory of Branches
BRANCH

ADDRESS

PHONE

NEW YORK (4)

2 Stone St
„
„
Deck &amp; Engine Dispatcher. .BOwlingr Green 9-3430
Steward Dispatcher
BOwling Green 9-6786
Agent
BOwling Green 9-3437
BOSTON (10)
..330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 40S7
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Gay St
Calvert 4539
PHILADELPHIA
« North 6th St
Lombard 7651
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS (16)... 309 Chartres St
Canal 3336
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St.
Savannah 3-1728

TAMPA r..:.:.r........423 East Piatt St

MOBILE
PUERTO RICO
GALVESTON
FT. LAUDERDALE

55 So. Conception St
45 Ponce de Leon
;219 20th Street.
2021 S. Federal Highway.
•w
"w

Tampa MM-1323

Dial 2-1392
Puerto de TIerm
Galveston 2-8043
.Ft. Lauderdale 1601

PUBLICATION OFFICE;
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York Gty
BOwling Green 9-834d

Dushane On WLB Biggs Organizes
Maritime Panel Florida Fishermen
Matthew Dushane, Washington
Representative of the SIU=SUP,
has been appointed official AFL
member of the newly created
maritime panel of the National
War Labor Board. The Panel has
been created to study and make
recommendations to the WLB on
disputed cases and voluntary
wage adjustment cases involving
all personnel employed on all
ships.
Chairman of the Panel is Prof.
E. M. Morgan, acting dean of
Harvard Law School, and Burton
Oppenheim, deputy executive di­
rector of the WLB will serve as
vice chairman.
Bjorne Hailing, Washington
Representative of the NMU will
serve as the CIO member on the
panel.

i
t:
•. ir •

ii'S'

111

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. —For
the first time in history, Florida
fishermen are organized under
the aegis of the American Feder­
ation of Labor and are assured a
living wage for the present.
There are more than 450 com­
mercial fishermen in the new lo­
cal, which is a branch of the Sea­
farers International Union of
North America. The organization
work was done by Matt Biggs of
New Orleans, international rep­
resentative of the SIU.
The fishermen recently tied up
their boats and refused to leave
the docks until the price of
grouper had been raised. The
wholesale price had dropped from
8 to 6 cents a pound.
So, finding individual action as
useless as individual action al­
ways is, the fishermen barkened
to the words of Biggs. Now most
of the boats are on the job and
the price of grouper has returned
to 8 cents. Like an oldtime Sun­
day school book,,this story has a
—MORAL: ORGANIZEI"

J. B. Bryan, president. Pacific
American Shipowners Associa­
tion; San Francisco, Calif.; and
Edward J. Barber, president of
the Barber Steamship Lines, New
York City, wiU be the industry
representative on the panel.
Edward J. Neary, United Fruit
The panel, which started ses­ Co., New York City; Willard A.
sions at its headquarters at the Kiggins, A. H. Bull Steamship
WLB on Monday, will make Co., New York City; T. N. Cook,
findings and recommendations to Ocean Steamship Co., New York
be filed with the NWLB which City; Philip Iglchart, Grace
will make final determination of Lines, New York City; WiUiam
all cases. Applications for volun G. Mull ins, American Merchant
tary wage and salary adjustments Marine Institute, New York City,
will be referred directly to the and Baired Tewksbury, Midland
panel by the regional War Labor Steamship Co., Cleveland.
Boards.
Labor: ^ Frederick M. Myers,
National
Maritime Union (CIO);
The board's order. creating the'
Harry
Martin,
Masters, Mates,
commission stated that the panel
and
Pilots
(AFL);
J. H. Blake,
may sit as a three-man tri-partite
Marine
Engineers'
Beneficial
As­
panel, provided its tri-partite
sociation
(CIO);
Harry
Morgan,
character is retained.
American Communications Asso­
The following alternates were ciation (CIO); John Evans, In­
also announced by the WLB to- land Boatman's Union of the Pa­
flay: Industry; Chester W. Wil- cific (ClIO); John R. Owens, In­
letts, Great Lakes Towing Co ternational Longshoremen's As­
Cleveland; Captain O. Slack Bar- sociation (AFL), and Andrew Mc­
i-ett, Barrett Lines, Cincinnati; Donald, Radio Officers' Union.

LOG

Friday, August 20, 1943 ^

fR€POT?T OI\
-"^^ASHirVGTOIV
JBVMATTJIWJJUSHAM^
LEGISLATION: C o ntinuation to be subject to revocation by any
of the fight that was led by An­ ships officer at any time for any
drew Furuseth for s e a m e n's reason or no reason, such revo­
rights, and the action that was cation being an absolute black
taken at the conventions of the list and exile from the calling.
American Federation of Labor. Not even the shipoAvner had the
power -to return or replace it.
1909
19IQ
Re-endorsed biU abolishing in­
voluntary servitude of American
Condemned attempt to amend
Seamen in foreign ports and pro­ New York pilotage law; Con­
hibiting under and unskilled demned "WELFARE PLAN" of
manning of American Vessels. the Steel Trust. Urged Congress
Nine thousand sailors, marine to make the seamen a free man,
firemen and cooks had been com­ give him the right to help him­
pelled to struggle against condi­ self and improve the safety of
tions sought to be imposed on travel at sea.'^his petition des­
them by the vessels' owners on cribing the status of seamen was
the Great Lakes, who had declar­ endorsed: To those who govern
ed for the so-called "OPEN nations, to those who make laws,
SHOP" and almost immediately to humanitarians, democrats.
had opened employment agencies Christians and friends of human
tlirough which aU seamen were freedom everywhere, do we, the
employed after renuciation of seamen, the yet remaining bond­
membership in any union.
men, humbly, yet earnestly sub­
The ship owners in a large mit this&lt; our petition that we may
number of instances made it a be made free men and that the
condition of employment that the blighting disgrace of bondage be
men already employed, or seek­ removed from our labor, which
ing employment, must make af- once was considered honorable,
fadavit that they are not now, which is yet needed in the world
nor will they be, affiliated with of commerce, and which has been
any organization of labor while held to be of great importance to
earning their bread as seamen. nations with sea coasts to defend.
Still feeling that men might be Existing Maritime Law, except in
willing to make such illegal af­ the domestic trade of these U. S.,
fidavits in order to continue in makes of us the property of the
employment at times when em­ vessel on which we sail. We can­
ployment in other vocations was not work as seamen without sign­
scarce and difficult to obtain, and ing a contract which brings us'
that, after all, they needed some under this law.
stronger and, in their opinion,
more enduring means of absolute The contract is fixed by law or
control over seamen, they sent authorized, by governments. We
special representatives to Great have nothing to do with its terms.
Britain with a view of investi­ We either sign it or we sign it
gating and, if suitable to their not and remain landsman. When
purpose, employing a system signing this contract we surren­
which had been used by the ship­ der our working power to the
will of another man at all times
owners of that cDuntry.
while
the contract runs. We may
These representatives returned
not
leave
the vessel, though she
and evidently reported that the
is"
in
perfect
safety. We may not
English Shipping Federation Lim­
without
the
master's permission
ited had been the means in that
go
to
a
mother's
sick bed or fu­
country of depriving the seamen
neral,
or
attend
to any other
of such hope and faith as, for a
duties
of
a
son,
a brother, a
long time, was sufficient to pre­
christian
or
a
citizen.
If the own­
vent any efficient organization
er
thinks
he
has
reason
to fe^
amongst them. At the same time
that
we
desire
to
escape,
he
may,
reducing the wages to such fig­
without
judicial
investigation,
ures that it has been found in­
creasingly impossible to induce cause us to be imprisoned for
white men to ship, and as- a re­ safe keeping until he shall think
sult, 65,000 Chinese and Lascars it proper to take us out. If we
arc now employed on British ves­ have escaped, he may publish our
personal appearance along with
sels. The Lake Carriers Associa­
a
reward for our apprehension
tion determined to adopt this
and
return. He may through
system and impose it upon all its
contracts
between nations cause
maritime employees.
the
peace
officers and police to
The ihain features, of it are: A
aid him in recovering his prop­
certificate of membership' in the
Shipping Federation, Limited, erty. Tbe paptain may change,
containing an agreement in writ­ the owner-may change, we are
ing to serve under any terms and sold with the vessel, and so long
conditions imposed by the ship­ as the flag does not change there
owners; a registration of name, is nothing except serious illness
age, personal appearance, signa­ or our masters pleasure that will
ture, if any visible personal pe­ release us from the vessel. The
culiarities, such as birthmarks, master, acting for the vessel, may
scars or other still more effective release himsejf and the vessel by
paying a few dollars, with no al­
means of identification; an in­
dustrial passport, the holder of ternative.
which is to be thus identified, He that owns another man's
and a system of character mai-ks, labor power owns his body, since
such as the master of a vessel the two cannot be seperated. We
may choose to give, and upon stand in the relation to the vessel
which future employment or non as a serf did to the estate, as the
employment is to depend. In slave to the master. When serf­
fact, it was decidedly more vi­ dom was abolished in Western
cious than even the English sys­ Europe, we were forgotten by the
tem in that the Lake book was liberators and our status remain­

ed. When the slaves of the U.S^
and Brazil were emancipated our,
status continued. When serfdona
was abolished in Russia nd
change came to us. We now raise
our mancied hands in liumbls
supplication to restore, to us our
rights as brother men, to our laibor that honor which laelonged to
it until your power, expressing
itself through your law, set upon
it the brand of bondage in the
interest of cheap transporation
by water.
We respectfully submit that
this serfdom of the men in our
calling is of comparatively mod­
ern origin. Earlier maritime law
bound while in strange countries
and climes the seamen to his
shipmates and his ship, and the
ship to him, on the principle of
common hazard. In his own coun­
try he was free—^the freest of
men. We further humbly submit
that, as the consciousness of the
seamen's status penetrates
through the population, it will be
impossible to get free men to
send their sons into bondage or'
to induce free men's sons to ac­
cept it, and we, in all candor, re=
mind you that you, when yoii
travel by water, expect us—^the
serfs—to exhibit in danger the
highest qualities of free men, by
giving our lives for your safety.
At sea the law of common haz­
ard remains; there must be dis­
cipline and self-sacrifice, but in
any harbor where the vessel and
you are safe, we beseech you,
give to us that freedom which
you claim for yourself and which
you bestow upon others, to the
end that ^ we may be relieved, of
that bitterness of soul that is the
heavy burden of him who knows
and feels that his body is not his
own.
I
1911
Urged passage of bill freeing
seamen, and we hope and trust
that the importance to the na­
tion, to the traveling public and
to seamen employed is now suf­
ficiently well understood to stop
further opposition and to pass ai
just and to-long delayed measure.
1912
Seamen's bill passed the House.
It restores freedom to the sea­
men; it provides a standard of
skill for seamanship. It is draft­
ed with the design of equalizing
the operating expenses of foreign
vessels and American vessels. It
will tend to build up the Ameri­
can Merchant Marine without
subsidies or subterfuge. It will
encourage the American to fol­
low the sea as a profession. Tt
will provide in a much greater
measure improved conditions of
life on board ship for seamen. Its
safety provisions wiU, to a con­
siderable extent, increase secur­
ity of life and property at sea.
Above all and of vastly most im­
portance, it will abolish the last
provisions in our statutory law
for compulsory labor within the
jurisdiction of the U. S. Seamen
will no longer be deprived of
their individual liberty, or be •
compelled to suffer hardships and
wrongs beyond what are natur­
ally inherent in their dangerous,
hazardous "calling.
{Contimied on Page 3)

�'*5''fsSW/' j- •' •

;•'••

V

Friday, August 20, 1843

THE

ilEAFARERS

WHAT'S DOING

Around the Ports

LOG

Page Three 1

Washington Report
{Continuei from Page 2)
1913
After many years of persistent
endeavor we seciued the passage
of the seamen's bill by Congress,
March 2, 1913—but were astound­
ed to leam the President in the
closing hours of that body had
permitted the bill to die«by ap­
plying what is known as the
"POCKET VETO" on the plea
that it would interfere with
"TREATY RIGHTS." The bill
was again passed by the Senate
and it is our firm conviction the

House will pass it without
amendment at an early date. Iramediate passage by the House
and its approval by the President
urged.
,
1914
Insisted on passage of the sea­
men's bill, and urged the imme­
diate writing of letters to mem­
bers of Congress by citizens of
their respective home districts.
Urged Congress to so change our
registration laws that any ves­
sel rated in the highest class of
any responsible classification so­
ciety may be registered as an
American vessel to sail in any
trade, provided that she be com­
pelled to carry citizens of the
U. S. as licensed officers. Absence
of any standard of efficiency in
the men employed is the direct
causes of such man slaughter at
sea as occured in the wrecks of
the TITANIC, VOLTURNO,
MONROE, EMPRESS OF IRE­
LAND and many others. We
therefore call on Congress to pass
the seamen's bill and for its im­
mediate signing by the Presi­
dent. The shipowners had op­
posed the bill ostensibly on the
ground that it would be neces­
sary to change .sixteen treaties if
it became law.

pretty much of a shame to see a these ports and have them stand­
crew sail a ship when the orig­ ing by to take over when the
We note in local publications inal crew got off in protest be­ union crew refuse to sign on.
that some Congressmen and Sen­ cause of something that was de­ Well, I guess that I have bent
ators are going to introduce a bill trimental to them. However, the your ears long enough, but in
calling for the death penalty for men that sailed these two ships parting let me ask you this, when
any one responsible for deliver­ were informed by the members you are on the beach come to
ing defective material to our on the beach just what the score the halls on Monday night and
armed forces. We, of course, are was, but the ship stiU sallfB. A by doing this we will be able to
wholeheartedly in- accord with couple of our members out of the have meetings, ^d at the meet­
this, but if such a bill becomes two crews that got off were not ings you will be able to find out
the law of the land the first ones in sympathy. One in particular just what the score is on matters
to be prosecuted under it should wanted to throw in his book as pertaining to you and your union. Dushare, Agent of the NMU, will
HARRY COLLINS. Agent get the Secretary's job in the
be the RMO. If ever defective he staled that there was a war
, material existedj we would like going on and he was pretty weU
USS when it opens. That is if it
to know what is more so than fed up with this kind of Malarky.
does.
We are waiting any day
GALVESTON
those so-called trained men this Well, when you consider the
now
for
them to start a drive for
outfit sends aboard ships. After length of time that this man is in
Well, the sweater boys of the old and discarded clothes for the
spending somewhere in the the Union, and the. lack of knowl­ NMU have arrived in town. The destitute seamen. With the
neighborhood of $2,000 to teach edge as to the principles of other day they were around pass­ money we are making today, we
these boys how to dance, and Unionism, wellj maybe you can ing out the convention Pilot and sure need old and discarded
sing old Glory, they are eventu­ overlook his feelings, but my an­ there sure was a bunch of paper clothes. I hear that the Komally given berths on ships with swer to this is, that if the men to pick up from the streets. They rades believe in free love, I won­
the instructions that if they don't on the beach will miss a few have been trying to get a foot­ der if that is the inducement that
know what the score is, the old- drinks on Monday night and at­ hold in the city of Galveston ever Curran is using to get the Ad­
timers will teach them. Of course tend a meeting, possibly they will since 1937, but to date no dice. miral to put haybags on the ships,
*the oldtimers have no alternative, be in a better position to under- And the gazoonies in their sweat­ in lieu of good working condi­
for as a measure of protection stand that the m.ajority and their ers did not make an impression tions. And the boys would be all
for them and the ship, they find opinions are always superior to the on the natives what-so-ever. The taken up with their love affairs,
themselves obliged to do so. So opinion of one individual and people of this town are wise to they would not mind the cheekthese boys' real training period that the majority must always the fakers. The town is getting off system, that is being pushed
becomes effective when they ac­ rule.
back into shape again after the down their necks.
The writer is given to under­ hurricane, and we are still doing
tually join a vessel. Ask some of
It is almost cotton picking
them where they learned sea­ stand that the old shark chaser business at the same old hall.
time here in the vaUeys and
manship and invaribly they an­ Casey Jones is now gracing the
Have a new ship out in a few plains of Texas. I understand
swer ABOARD THE SHIP THEY deck of one of the Palatial Bull days for Waterman. Some time that Harry-the-Bridge organized
SAILED ON. Hence we call this liners in the capacity of Chief ago we had in this port what was the sheep shearers of Calif. (How
ruthless spending of taxpayers' Steward. However, we do hope called the Ladies Merchant Ma­ about you Joe, getting the cot­
money an oUt-and-out act of sa that his experiences on the Car- rine Aux. They collected some ton pickers organized into the Ships sailing under the control
of the War Shipping Administra­
botage, which, of course, nothing nabuUe of the Cuban Distillery money and would go out to the fold of Mustache Joe?)
tion which do not have ship's
will not be repeated at this time Marine Hospital and give some
shall be done about.
Well, time is wasting, as in doctors aboard henceforth will be
Another important gathering as we have very reliable infor­ of the boys a pack of smokes, every paper that I pick up, "Hey
stocked with a revised rm'nimiiTn
at Washington by the biggies of mation that Casey blinded 2 then the NMU and the USS came Rube, give up your horse, the
standard supply of drugs and
the WSA agreed with our con­ sharks that were after him. (We into the picture. They promised merchant marine needs seamen,
medical supplies prescribed by
tention that the Liberty ship was wonder where he got the mud to one woman the big job of run­ why follow the plow all day,
the U. S. Public Health Service.
a very obsolete type of carrier kick in their faces).
ning the USS. She fell, hook, when you can get some of this
The revised edition of "Ship's
and that it would be impractica
This RMO business is getting line and sinker, nothing was too gravy, that some of the newspa­ Medicine Chest and First Aid at
to use in post war competition rather serious these days. I call­ good for the boys. She was per columnist brag about." We
Sea," published by the Health
Also for other reasons, it was a ed them 12 times for AB's and finally pushed aside, and out of in the SIU are doing fine, mighty
Service, lists 99 standard articles
damnable contraption at best, finally at the end of two weeks I the picture of being the big shot fine, although we do not have
and how to use them. The list
but decided for expediency's sake had to circle the skid road and of the USS at a big salary of any fellow travelers in Washing­
includes a wide variety of recog­
to keep on building them any­ get enough AB's to sail the ship which she was promised, the ton or any members in the rightnized medical supplies. Fortyhow. Well, just so, long as these myself. Of course, they sent me Aux. broke up. They had some hand pocket of the C.P. We fight
six of the prescribed items, such
fannie sitters don't have to sail some men, but they only worked dough in the bank, some of the for what we get, if you don't
as phenobarbital, sulfanilamide
them and live on them. We will long enough to get the price of good ladies were in favor of think so—compare wages, work­
and sulfathiazole, are listed as
have to take the consequence
a bottle. It is reported here that turning the dough over to the ing conditions, yes, overtime "drugs", while the remainder,
SQ be it.
they are recruiting rated men in NMU but to date, as far as I can where there is- no security such as adhesive plaster, ice bags,
Captain O'Sullivan of the New York and giving them learn, there were some ladies watches.' We got 'em Joe, and
hemostats and tongue depressors,
crews' quarters committee gave standby pay and when they have who knew all about the NMU we did not get them under false are under the "surgical and gen­
me his solemn promise he would a ship in a port that they are go­ and -the money is still in the colors or deceive the men in the eral supplies" category.
send me a communication which ing to put the WSA rider No. 64 bank.
SIU.
Although WSA operated ships
would certify the ships Hospital on and ship these rated men to
It is rumored around that
E. R. WALLACE. Agent almost always travel in convoy,
for the crews use until such
which always affords doctors, the
time as the so-called plan 10 was
Administration is now in the
put into effect on ships sailing
midst of a training program
from this area. However, I have
which will eventually provide
not as yet received same. If he
pharmacist's mates aboard all
daesn't do something about re­
merchant ships. In addition, all
lieving the conjested situation qn
officers are required to pass aa
those Liberty ships he will be
extensive first aid course.
obliged to allot more space for
In its order to General Agents,
the Hospital, as that is where
(Continued from Page 1)
the WSA stated that the items it
most of the crew may wind up.
being a request for "special favors". This is ing (that's right, nothing) that would jeopar­
listed as standard were consid­
Shipping for the time being
being resisted by,the shipowners who "neither dize their hiring halls. The hiring haUs are
ered minimum for the protection
has approached normal, and ~wc
asked special favors nor opposed a sound and the very foundation of union security in mari­
of the crew. Agents will be per­
haven't shipped any from RMO,
equitable plan."
time, and if they are to be undermined as the
mitted to add additional items
but hang onto your life belts
He then attacks SIU Washington Repre­ price of unemployment insurance — then we
which they consider advisable.
anyhow.
sentative Matthew Dushane for betraying la­ don't want that insurance!
JOSEPH FLANAGAN.
bor by threatening to reject unemployment
For reasons of efficiency and job security
Agent
compensation if this "special favor" was not the union halls should be designated the regis­
included in the plan.
tration point for men applying for compensa­
All of Mr. Ferguson's high class journalism tion. This is not asking "special favors," it is
PHILADELPHIA
McLAUGHLIN: You have 8
deceives no one, least of all the seamen. We the minimum requirements of men determined
hours overtime coming from the
know that the shipowners have always op­ to maintain their gains and security.
Well, here we go again, doing
Robin Line.
posed unemployment insurance for the men
The seamen deserve unemployment com­
business at the same old place as
Any members of crews of fol­
because it means a few pennies out of their pensation — being one of the few groups of
usual. We have had two ships in
lowing vessels at time of attack,
swollen pockets. We know that any fair com­ workers in this country not now covered by
here in the last ten days, one was
should collect $125 attack bonus
pensation will only be passed literally over such insurance. But in obtaining it, they don't
a Robin Line ship and the other
from companies: Benjamin Latheir fat protesting bodies.
intend to jeopardize the hiring hall they fought
a Waterman. They both signed
trobe. Robin Gray. Panama City,
And as for Dushane betraying the interests so long to obtain.
on a crew from the RMO an4
Richard Henry Lee, John Daven­
of
the
men—Dushane said at the House Com­
Mr. Ferguson's concern for the rights of
sailed with the WSA rider No. 64
port. Pan Gulf, Kofresi. John
mittee hearings that the seamen wanted noth- the seamen is touching, but transparent.
attached to the articles. It seems
Sevens. Francis Marion.

BALTIMORE

Increased Medical
Aid Abroad Ships

Journal Of Commerce Gets A New
Maritime Editor—Same Scab Line

MONEY DUE

.. V.

�Page Four

THE

SEAFARERSLOG

Friday. August 20. 1843

i: {'•

|il^|l-1
ii''

I .

•i i

Crew Gets $7,000 Overtime
sel is secured at the cargo ition set forth in the agreement pany has already paid aU avaU- incidental to the real purpose.
{Continued from Page I)
berth. This is to mean wh6n are to be foimd in Section 20, Ar­ able seamen entitled to this over­ Indeed, the Union asserts that
overtime, inasmuch as the agree­
the
finished with the engines ticle No. 3 of the agreement, time, and that in cases where the the breaking of watches was for
ment provides that watches can­
bell
is rung."
men were required to work be­ the purpose of getting "more
which reads as follows:
not be required to do certain
"Art. 4= Section 3= Breaking
fore
8 a.m= they were compen= work put of the men="
types of work, such as mainten
"Selling Walches. Sea watch sated at the overtime rate, and
Watches.
In
aU
ports
when
ves­
ance work, etc., except between
es shall be set not later then that they also received overtime The Company also stresses the
sel is alongside of a' dock
the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
watches shall be broken if the noon on sailing day. When the pay for painting accommodations, fact that the agreement was a
The Union asserts that to es­
vessel sails before noOn watch­ etc.
peace time arrangement, and that
tablish a principle which would schedule stay of vessel will ex­
es
shall
be
set
when
all
lines
the
circumstances of this case
ceed twenty-four (24) hours,
permit the Master to deny over
are on board and vessel is all The Company further states were brought about by war time
When,
scheduled
stay
of
vesse!
time for work which members 0:
clear of dock.
that the Security Watch Agree­ conditions. In the opinion of this
will be less than twenty-four
the crew performed outside o:
"(a) When the watch below ment was submitted to the War referee this of itself does not
(24)
hours,
watches
shall
be
the hours which fell within their
i^ called out to wofk they shal! Shipping Administration, but was authorize or warrant the Com­
v/atch, would be to destroy the maintained.
be paid overtime for work per­ not approved; that subseauently pany in failing to live up to the
"When
a
ship
is
anchored
or
existing agreement, the ultimate
formed during their watch be­ the Union contended that inas­ terms of the agreement. The
effect of which would be that the tied up to a buoy for the pur­ low."
much as its agreement on the agreement was reached as a re­
pose of loading or unloading
seamen would feel that they need
overtime
claim was a concession sult of negotiations between the
cargo, watches shall be set and
From all of which the Union for having negotiated the Secm*- Company and the Union, and
not be bound by the terms of the
broken the same as if the ship insists that since on the occasions
agreement siiice the Master felt
ity Watch Agreement, such agree­ any change in its terms can be
is
alongside a dock."
for which overtime pay is claim­ ment on the overtime pay claim made only by' mutual agreement
and acted as though not bound
by its terms; that under such cir
The Union contends that the ed, the vessel was not "in port" was no longer binding.
of the parties.
cumstances the seamen would above provisions conclusively re­ within the meaning of that term The Company, asserts that the
In its opinion in the case of the
take the position that they were quire that a ship in order to come as defined in the agreement, existing agreement with the
at liberty to break watches any within the designation "in port" watches should not have been Union is a peace time arrange­ Tennessee Coal, Iron and R. R.
time they desired and the whole must enter the port with the broken, and the members of the ment and that the circumstances Co. and the CIO Mine, MiU &amp;
stability of the Maritime industry definite purpose of loading or im- crew are entitled to overtime for of this case were brought about Smelter Workers Union, the Na­
would be set at naught.
loading cargo, or in lying along­ all time they were required to be by war time conditions, inasmuch tional War Labor Board had the
on duty outside of their regular as a vessel would not lie at an­ following to say:
The Union further insists that side the dock; that at none of the watches.
chor in the various ports for any
"It cannot be too strongly
when new situations arise which ports involved in this dispute was
lengthy period of time in com­
emphasized that by insisting
CONTENTIONS OF THE
may call for different treatraent, the ship alongside dock, nor in
mercial trade.
upon the sanctity of contract in
such new situations can be met fact was there any loading or un­
COMPANY
loading
of
cargo
which
is
the
labor
relations the Board is
only by mutual consent of the
The Company admits that at The Company further contends acting as the best friend bl
parties—the Company and the conclusive test as to the purpose
that the vessel was neither "in
both labor and industry. Un­
Union, and until changed by mu­ in entering port; that it is clear all places where the vessel was port" nor at sea and that the
tual consent, the existing agree­ that the ports in this case were anchored to await convoys the existing agreement fails to define less parties to collective-bar­
simply temporary and/or con­ Master broke watches, and the
gaining can depend mutually
ment must be lived up to.
working conditions under such a
upon the terms of their written
Referring specifically to the venient places of refuge which crew worked eight (8) hours a situation, and that, therefore, the
agreements,
there is little value
agreement the Union in its brief were contr^olled by the expedi­ day from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
general working rules should
ency
of
the
situation;
that
the
in
the
collective
- bargaining
points out that Able Seamen and
The Company asserts that while apply.
mere
fact
that
the
stay
in
some
process.
Labor
relations
which
Ordinary Seamen are governed
the vessel was not "in port" as
cases
was
protracted
to
as
much
will
redound
to
the
benefit
of
The
Company
further
makes
by Article No. 3, which is en­
defined in Section 12, Article No.
as
two
months
or
over
only
fur­
employer,
employee
and
the
reference
to
the
fact
that
by
titled "Deck Department" "Base
3, of the agreement between the
country can best be promoted
Rate" and "Working Rules Deck ther emphasizes the fact that the Company and the Union, never­ breaking watches the Master
ports
were
not
entered
for
the
by living up to contract obli­
benefitted
th^crew
to
the
extent
Department" and that Oilers,
theless its position is fully cov­
gations. A contract which may
Watertenders and Firemen are purpose of loading or unloading ered under Section 3, Article 2 that they worked only forty-four
be breached at will rests upon
governed by Article No. 4, en­ cargo.
of the agreement, the pertinent hours per week, instead of fiftya foundation of shifting sands."
six (56) hours.
titled "Engine Department The Union insists that the fore­ part of which is as follows:
Wages."
going provisions of the agreement
The undersigned referee is of
DECISION
"Article No. 2. Section 3.
preclude
any
contention
on
the
the opinion and so decides'that
It refers to various provisions
Members of all departments
of the agreement which it con­ part of the Company that the shall perform the necessary and In reaching his decision in this when the SS SCHOHARIE was
at anchor awaiting convoy at tie
tends supports its claim. Its first ship was "in port", and tljat such
customary duties of that de­ matter the undersigned referee
provisions
also
describe
the
terms
various places heretofore men­
reference is to Article No. 2, Gen­
partment. Each member of aU has given careful study to the
which
control
after
the
ship
is
tioned,
she was not "in port'' as
jriefs
of
the
parties
outlining
eral Rules, Section 12, page 3,
departments shaU perform only
defined in the agreement; that
their
respective
views
with
ref­
which defines "Port Time." This "in port".
the recognized and customary
Section reads as follows:
The Union further contends duties of his particular rating. erence to the proper interpreta­ the,Master was not authorized or
tion of the contracts in the light empowered to ireak watches and
"Port Time. The words 'in that the terms which "control from The hours of labor for aU mem­ of the facts presented.
that those members of the Deck
port' shall mean the time a the time the ship originally sails bers of the ship's crew not on
Department
and the Engine De­
On
its
face
the
agreement
is
watch as required by law, or
vessel is at its dock and proper- until its final destination is reach­
partment
represented
by the
clear
and
precise
in
its
terms.
It
, ly secured, or from the time ed er until it comes "in port" their ratings, shaU be from 8 states as emphatically as the Eng- Union are entitled to be paid
the anchor was dropped in any within the meaning of the defin- a.m. to 5 p.m.; any work out­ ish language can make it when overtime rates for the work
side of these hours and on Sat­
safe port, during the trip for
which they performed which was
urday afternoons, Sundays and watches "shall be set", when
the purpose of loading or un­
outside of the hours which or­
watches
"shall
be
broken",
and
Holidays shall be paid for at
loading cargo or awaiting a
defines what the words "in port" dinarily fell within their respec­
the regular rate. • • • "
, berth; until the raising of an­
tive watches.
shall mean.
chor, or casting lines off dock."
The Company further asserts
BRYCE C. HOLCOMBE,
The only time the Master is
that in compliance with Section
It is the Union's , contention
permitted, under the agreement,
Referee
3 of Article 2, overtime at regular
that, this general rule is to be
to break watches is when the ves­ Done at New Orleans, La.
CHARLES
RUSH
rates was paid to all seamen for
read in conjunction with the
J. V. NOVITSHI
all work on Saturday afternoons, sel is "in port", that is "at its this 14th day of August, 1943.
specific rules for the two depart­
dock and properly secured", or
Sundays and Holidays and all
ments. These sections of the P. E. GUSSEL
anchored
"in any safe port" * • •
E. BARCUMBE
time in excess of 8 hours per day.
agreement are as follows:
for
the
purpose
of loading or dis­
S. M. BROMBEG
The Company states that the
charging cargo or awaiting berth,
"Art. No. 3. Section 19. Break­ J. BRUNNELL
voyage ended and the crew was
until the raising of anchor, or
ing Watches and Work in Port. D. BALLOCH
paid off before a U. S. Shipping
casting
lines off dock."
"(a) In all ports watches shall
ARTHUR L. MANNING
JAMES TIPPETTS
Commission on
at
be broken alongside the docks JOHN R. SHEFFIELD
which time no complaints was On none of the occasions when Your wife is very worried and
immediately after ship is se­ ROBERT B. PEROICH
registered; that subsequently the he Master broke watches and wants to see you. She is sorry
cured, except in those ports AXEL J. PEDERSON
Union claimed that watches placed the men on port time, for for what happened. Flanagan
where stay of vessel will not
JAMES A. MASTIN
should not have been broken as which the Union is claiming over­ says it is OK.
exceed 24 hours, there watches
NICHOLAS DIESSO
the vessel was not "in port" as time, was the vessel "at its dock
'may run consecutively. Any TOLLIVER H. WILLIAMS
defined by Section 12 of Article and properly secured, or • * * in
work performed on watch be­ FRANKLIN A. HOOKER
No. 2 of the agreement; that later any safe port, • * • for the pur­
low will be overtime. Any part STANLEY J. COOPERSMITH on representatives of the respec­ pose of loading or unloading car­
PHILADELPHIA •.
$21.25
of a watch between midnight
NOAH J. NIMS
tive parties met and negotiated a go or awaiting berth * * *'" ' S. S. GRACE ABBOTT ... 12.00
and 8 a.m. shall constitute a ROBERT L. INDVIK
Security Watch Agreement; that
The Company argues that the A. B. BLALOCK
12.00
complete watch.
WILLIAM G. TANNER
at this meeting the Company men benefitted by the breaking B. L. ROGERS
6.00
"(b) In port the hours of la­ ROBERT L. HARDMAN
agreed to pay 975'hours overtime of watches to the extent that M. L. RILEY
6.00
bor shall be between the hours HENRY J. WITT
to the Deck Department for the their hours of work were reduced J. FLANNERY
5.00
of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. All work ALFRED A. AMBOZAK
time the vessel was anchored at from 56 hours per week to 44 MICKEY QUINN
5.00
-performed after 5 p.m. and be­ WILLIAM J. HARPE
, inasmuch as it hours per week. It ik not assert­ S. S. SAMUEL GRIFFIN.. 5.00
fore 8 a.m. shall be overtime.
ALVIN J. CHAPPELLO
was established that the Master ed that the breaking of watches J. PIRES
4.00
"Art. 4. Section 1. Setting JOHN GRECU
had restricted one-half of the was for the exclusive benefit of Hi WESTFALL
3.00
Watches.
GENE H. WISNER
deck crew- to the vessel for se­ the crew so that it must be as­ V.SMITH............... 3.00
"On day of arrival, watches HOMER L. NANCE
curity purposes each night, and sumed that whatever benefit ac­
shall be broken when the ves­ PHILLIP TUMILTY
in fulfiUment thereof the Com­ crued to them must have been
TOTAL
$81.25

Honor Roll

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CREW GETS $7,000 OVERTIME; OUR WORKING RULES ARE UPHELD&#13;
JOURNAL OF COMMERCE GETS A NEW MARITIME EDITOR--SAME SCAB LINE&#13;
DUSHANE ON WLB MARITIME PANEL&#13;
BIGGS ORGANIZES FLORIDA FISHERMEN&#13;
INCREASED MEDICAL AID ABROAD SHIPS&#13;
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                    <text>•sm

OFFICIAL GROAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND OULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
NEW YORK, N. Y., FRIDAY. AUGUST 27, 1943

No. 22

Vigilance Needed To Protect Halls
We Purchase AFL Opens
More War Political
Bonds
Campaign
(This resolulion was pass­
ed last Monday night up and
down the coast by member­
ship vote.)

p

CHICAGO, 111.—The American
Federation of Labor has launched
a nation-wide political drive to
elect members of Congress in
1944 who are friendly to labor's
cause. President William Green
announced that the Executive
Council had authorized a concert­
ed campaign to get out the labor
vote in every city. Instructions
will be sent to all affiliated unions
including city central bodies and
State Federations, to see "to it
thdt all AFL members register in
accordance with local laws so
that thej' may be eligible to vote.
Likewise, local campaign com­
mittees will be under orders to
follow up on the membership and
make certain they go to the polls
on election day.
A national, non-partisan poli­
tical committee .will be set up in
Washington to check the records
of all candidates for public of­
fice and to decide whether the
AFL will endorse or oppose them
in accordance with their attitude
on labor questions.
This committee will be com­
posed of President Green, Secre­
tary - Treasurer George Meany
and the legislative representa­
tives on the AFL staff.

RESOLUTION
August 19, 1943.
WHEREAS: The Atlantic &amp;
Gulf District of the Seafarers InternationaL Union of North Am­
erica has in the Hospit^, Burial,
and General Funds more than
sufficient cash to meet the ordi­
nary disbursements required of
these funds, and
WHEREAS: This cash is lying
idle in the hank, and
WHEREAS: United States De­
fense Bonds constitute the safest
investment in the world, the en­
tire integrity of the government
being their guarantee, and
.WHEREAS: The government
has urgent need of this money to
finance a war in which our mem­
bers are frontline fighters, there­
fore be it
RESOLVED: That the Secre­
tary-Treasurer of the Atlantic
and Gulf District be instructed to
withdraw $15,000 from the Gen­
eral Fund and $10,160 from the
Hospital and Burial Fund, and
with this money purchase war
bonds, and be it further
RESOLVED: That a banking
committee of 3 men be elected at Wooden Lifeboats
the New York Branch meeting to Banned On Tankers
go with the Secretary-Treasurer
to deposit these bonds in the safe Installation of wooden lifeboats
deposit box. These bonds shall on tankers was prohibited by the
be examined by each Quarterly Coast Guard yesterday in an or­
der effective September 1. After
Finance Committee.
Herbert Messervy, No. 2076 that date all lifeboats installed on
tankers must be constructed of
John D. Lewis, No. 477
metal.
John Smalls, No. 22163

No Victory Tax Levied
On Transportation Money
In a letter to SIU Washington
Representative Matthew Dushane. Internal Revenue Com­
missioner Guy T. Helvering ruled
officially that shipowners, are not
to deduct the 5% Victory Tax
from the transportation money
paid crews.
The Commissioner made it
elear, however, that transporta­
tion money must be included in
the gross .income , of the seamen
when filing income returns at the
end of the year.
The text of the letter follows:
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
Washington, D. C.
August 19, 1943
Mr. Matthew Dushane, Washington Representative
Seafarers Int. Union &amp;
The Sailors Union of the Pacific
^24—5th St., N. W.

Washington, D. C.
Sir:
Reference is made to your let­
ter dated Jxme 15, 1943, regarding
a ruling with respect to the with­
holding of the 5 percent victory
tax under the circumstances
stated therein which, briefiy, are
as follows:
The Sudden and Christsenson
steamship company of San Fran­
cisco, California, operates the
steamship W. R. Howells. The
vessels articles terminated in the
port of New York. Under the
terms of an agreement between
the Sailors Union of the Pacific
and the American Steamship
owners, of which the Sudden and
Christenson steamship company
is a member. Any seamen who
signs on a vessel on the Pacific
{Continued on Page 2)

High Praise For SIU Crew
Comes From Skipper
Sezdarers International Union
Gentlemen:
I am not the kind of man that looks for praise, but when
I do a job well, I sometimes like to be commended. And in
as much, as when a crew gets out of line there is plenty of
noise in general, I think that it should be fair to commend a
crew when it stays in line.
I have just brought the S.S. Sarazen in with a full SIU
crew and I thought that I would show my appreciation by
commending the entire crew. I have been going to sea for the
past iweniy-iwo years. I have sailed in the focs'l, in every
department of the unlicensed personnel. I have sailed as of­
ficer with crews from every organization, including the Ship­
ping Board and non-union ships. And I can truthfully say
* that the crew of the Sarazen was the most efficient and re­
liable crew that I have .ever sailed with. If the SIU keeps
putting out crews like this, they have reached the aim to make
seamanship an honorable and respectable vocation which it
rightfully should be.
I have endeavored to do my part, and the crew and of­
ficers have shown their appreciation by cooperation. If we
keep this cooperation going together, we can keep them sailing.
Steady as she goes, •
CAPT. H. E. HELLER,
S.S. Sarazen.

Founder Of Labor Day
ReceivesAnnualHonor
Early in May of 1882 the newly
formed Central Labor Union of
New York City was holding a
meeting that would have been
forgotten decades ago but for one
piece of business transacted on
that occasion. At that meeting
Labor Day was born.
Among those present at the
meeting was a man in his middle
thirties named Peter J. McGuire.
A native of New York City, he
had gone to work in a dry goods
store while still a child. Later he
had been apprenticed to the car­
penter's trade, and at the age .of
twenty he had become a imion
man.
It was McGuire who sent out a
call for a conference of represen­
tatives of the various scattered
groups of organized carpenters.
This conference, staged at
Chicago, established, the United
Bratherhood of Carpenters and
Joiners, now known as one of the
largest and strongest of Ameri­
can trade unions. McGuire had
long thought that a day should
be set aside to honor "those who
from rude nature have delved
and carved all the comfort and
grandeur we behold."
So, on the eighth of May of the
year 1882, he stood up before his
fellow-delegates at the meeting
of the Central Labor Union and
proposed that one day in the
year should be designated as a
general holiday for the toiling

PETER J. McGUIRE
millions. This day, he suggested,
should be known as Labor Day.
The delegate from the Chicago
Trades and Labor Assembly, A.
C. Cameron, proposed and the
convention adopted the follow­
ing:
"Resolved, That the first Mon­
day in September of each year be
set apart as a laborers' national
holiday, and that- we recommend
its observance by all wake work­
ers, irrespective of sex, calling or
nationality."

Keep In Touch With
Your Local Draft Board,

"N-

By John Hawk
(The following instructions
were sent to all branch Agents by
the Secretary-Treasurer, and are
being printed in the LOG be&gt;
cause of the importance that
each SIU man understand fully
the positions of the Union on
such questions as the RMO
trainees, fink
halls, pier head
jumps, etc.)
Let's not forget for one mom­
ent that one of the main points
that the Sailors Union of the Pa­
cific fought hardest for and won
in the Pacific Coast Strikes of
1934, 1936 and 1937 was the abol­
ishment of the Pacific American
Shipowners Fink hall, and after
that ' was accompished they
blocked the setting up of Gov­
ernment Fink halls on the Paci­
fic Coast in order to preserve
their own Union hiring hall. And
let us not forget that militant
union seamen gave their lives,
and have stood many long cold
and hungry picket watches in or­
der to make possible the SUP
and the SIU, of today with its
own Union hiring halls and the
best working conditions in the
history of the Maritime Industry^
MAIN LIFELINE
Our main life line is our
hiring hall, aU our contracts with
the shipowners call for a closed
shop which means that every un­
licensed job aboard contracted
ships shall be filled from our
Union hiring halls. At times, we
might not have enough of our
own members ip a certain ,port
to fill all jobs, however, ratings
with the exception of messmen,.
ordinary seamen and wipers, ar­
rangements can be made with the
operators at their expense to
transport rated men from one of
our Branches to another if the
rated men are available in other
Branches. In any event, when an
Agent cannot supply a crew
through the above sources, he
can call the RMO and they will
send their trainees or misfits to
our Union hall to be dispatched
to a ship. The Union has the
right to reject any man the
{Continued an Page 4)

Far-Fetched Ruse To
Ban Union Buttons
A brand new wrinkle in em­
ployer arguments against work­
ers wearing union buttons, was
put forward by the Campbell
Soup Company.
The management of the com­
pany's Chicago plant claimed the
buttons might "faU into the soup"
and thus "contaminate" the pro­
duct. It souglit to ban them on
that ground.
Rejecting that argument, the
War Labor Board specfiically
authorized the wearing of but­
tons, but added that both sides
should by collective bargaining
agree on a type that could not
fall off.

�THE

' Page Two

SEAFARERS

LOG

fR€POi?T or\.
^ASHIt\GTOtV

SEAFARERS
Published by the

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
NATIONAL WAR LABOR
BOARD

Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor

HARRY LUNDEBERG

- - - - - - President

110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

------- Secy-Treas.

P. O. Box 25, Station P., New York City

JMATTHEW DUSHANE -

- Washington Rep,

424 5 th Street, N.W., Washington, D. C.

Directory of Branches
PHONE

ADDRESS

BRANCH
NEW YORK (4)

2 Stone St
.••••*-«
Deck &amp; Engine Dispatcher.. BOwIing Green 9-3430
Steward Dispatcher
BOwling Green 9-6786
Agent
BOwling Green 9-3437
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North &lt;^y St.
.^vert 4539
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St
Lombard 7651
NORFOLK..?.
Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS (16)... 309 Chartroe SL
Canal 3336
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay StSavannah 3-1728

TAM^ fr:423^Ea^^puu st..

MOBILE
PUERTO RICO
GALVESTON
FT. LAUDERDALE

... Tampa^-1323

65 So. Conception St
Dial 2-1392
45 Ponce da Leon
Puerto de Tlem
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-8043
2021 S. Federal Highway. .Ft. Lauderdale 1601
•

•

w

PUBLICATION OFFICE:
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-834^

No Victory Tax Levied
On Transportation Money
{Continued from Page 1)
Coast and is discharged on the
Atlantic Coast, or vice versa, is
entitled to transportation back
to the port of employment. Pur­
suant thereto each member of
the crew of such vessel was paid
the sum of $125.00 to cover the
cost of transportation and subsistance from New York to San
Francisco.
The withholding for victory
tax for purposes prescribed by
sectidn 466 of the internal rev­
enue code, as amended by the
revenue act of 1942, is applicable
to "wages", which are defined in
section 465(b) to mean "all re­
muneration *** for services per­
formed by an employee for his
employer, *** "Section 19.465 (c)
of regulation 103 further provides
with respect to "wages."
"Traveling and other expenses
—amounts paid or reimburse­
ments made to employees speci­
fically for traveling or other ex­
penses incurred in the business
of the employer are not subject
to withholding."
It is the opinion of this office
that the amounts payable to dis­
charged seamen under the pro­
visions of the contracts outlined
above are paid for expenses in­
curred in the business of the em­
ployer and do not constitute re­
muneration for services or
"wages" within the meaning of
the code or regulations. There­
fore such payments are not sub­
ject to withholding for victory

Friday, August 27, 1943

tax pm-poses. Furthermore, under
the compaiable definition o f
"Wages" which is found in sec­
tion 1621 (a) of the internal rev­
enue code and the regulations
applicable thereto, it is also be­
lieved that similar payments,
which may he made subsequent
to the effective date of the cur­
rent tax payments act of 1943,
are not includible in "wages"
within the meaning of the Act.
However, the amounts so paid
must be included in the gross in­
come of the seamen when filing
income victory tax returns for
th.e taxable year in which they
are received, and the seamen will
be entitled to deductions on such
returns for the amounts actually
expended during the taxable year
in returning to^ the port of em­
ployment.
Respectfully,
GUY T. HELVERING,
Commissioner

headquarters of the union. The panies whereby the AB's would
main effect of executive order No. receive $110.00 per month. There
On July 8, 1943, the Board set 9328 in the maritime industry in is nothing that I nor any one else
up a panel for the maritime in­ the offshore and coastwise trade, sitting on a ^anel can do that
dustry. This panel is known as is that it sets up a supposedly can upset this ruling, unless the
the War Shipping Panel and standard scale of wages—its ef­ President issues a new executive
shall have jurisdiction over all fect on the SIU Atlantic and Gulf order. This does not mean that
cases involving the personnel of agreements is in that some of AB's who now receive $110.()0
relief and regular crews employ­ them do not come under what is per month on some ships will
ed on all ships, dry cargo, tank­ generally termed as the standard, not receive it in the future, this
ers, barges and towboats, en­ and are above the code of stand­ order only applies to new agree­
ments, that may be submitted to
gaged in offshore, coastwise, har­ ard wages.
the Board.
,
Example:
In
the
Waterman
andbor, and inland waterways.
The majority of the employes
The panel consists of six mem­ other agreements the AB's quar­
termasters
receive
$110.00
per
of
the NWLB are members of the
bers, two from labor, two from
CIO,
and from all indications the
month,
the
majority
of
all
the
the employers, and two shall
SUP
and
the SIU are being given
other
agreements
in
the
inrustry
represent the public. The board
the
works
on the QT by some of
the
AB's
receive
$100.00
per
may also appoint alterpates.
month. If the SIU or any other the employes. For instance, the
The two labor members are Union negotiate an agreement SIU signed an agreement with
yours truly, representing the AFL with the operators, and they both Smith &amp; Johnson on the 28th of
and Bjorne Hailing representing reach an agreement whereby the January, 1943. The company sub­
the CIO. Both the AFL and the AB's are to receive $110.00 per mitted the contract to the WSA,
CIO have alternates on the panel. month, the wage rate under ex­ which was approved by them and
The board states that dases shall ecutive order No. 9328 would not sent to the NWLB for their ap­
he heard as follows: "THE LA­ be approved by the Board, and proval. This contract was not on
BOR MEMBER OF THE PANEL the best that the AB's would get the agenda, and the staff mem­
SITTING IN EACH CASE would be $100.00 per month. Of ber who handles the cases stated
SHALL BE A MEMBER CHO­ course the labor member wouAd that this case was not through
SEN FROM THE CRAFT OR IN­ approve of the negotiated rate of being processed, and was not
DUSTRIAL GROUP INVOLVED $110, but the Board would turn ready. The SUP also has cases
BEFORE THE PANEL, OR it down.
here for approval and-yours truly
SUCH LABOR MEMBER AS HE
It can readily be seen that in was given the same answer on
MAY DESIGNATE."
the interest of future organiza­ them, although the CIO and sev­
This panel is only an advisory tion and expansion of both the eral non union cases that were
panel, and can only make recom­ SUP and the SIU, that in all fu­ submitted to the Board after the
mendations to the NWLB on all ture agreements that they nego­ SUP and SIU cases were submit­
applications for wage and salary tiate, they limit their demands to ted, were on the agenda and
adjustments and on all labor dis­ the employers to the^ standard some non uniSh cases were class­
putes referred to it.
agreements that they now have ed as emergency cases and were
The panel met on August 16, in effect. The SUP has a stand­ given priority. They were sent in
17, and 18, and handled fifty ard agreement so they would not as late as August 3rd to the board
ca.ses that were on the agenda. encounter any difficulties in hav­ for approval.
Ilhe cases involved Union and ing the Board approve of any
LEGISLATION;
non-Union requests for adjust­ new agreements that they may
This
completes
the history of
ments.
negotiate in the future. However
the
gaUant
fight
led
by Andrew
The determination for all set­ the SIU would be stymied by the
Furuseth
for
seamen's
rights, and
tlements depends on executive Board if they negotiated a wage
the
action
that
was
taken
at the
order No. 9328, copies of which agreement similiar to the wages
are being sent to the respective of the Waterman and other com­
{Continued on Page 3)

f-r^^SOHfils
RONALD EDNIE
Stop in and see the SecretaryTreasurer next time you are in
New York City.

Keep In Touch With
Your Local Draft Board.

ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
WEEK OF AUG. 9 TO 14 INCLUSIVE
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL

m

i:

i '•

I*'

1

SHIPPED

282

243

219

744

REGISTERED

250

231

127

608

Freddy Benson, SIU old timer known to hundreds of seamen up and down the Atlantic, is
traveling in high society these days. He spent a few weeks at the USS rest home in Gladstone.
N. J., and was on hand when the Duke and Duchess of Windsor came out to see how the other
half lives. Freddie is third from the left, the guy almost resting his chin on the Duchess' shoulder.
"So I says to the Duchess . . .

�Friday, August 27, 1943

THE

SEAFARERS

WHArS DOING

Around the Ports

LOG

Page Three

Washington Report

Although the seamen's law wai
{Continued from Page 2)
conventions of the American enacted after twenty years agi­
tation, during which time it was
Federation of Labor.
endorsed
in the platform of tho
1915
known as the Mobile Press-Reg­
two great political parties, at­
GALVESTON
BALTIMORE
THE
SEAMEN'S
BILL
WAS
ister on Sunday, August 8th,
PASSED BY CONGRESS AND tempts were already being made
1943, carried this item in a very
What
is
this
Fakeroo
Curran
SIGNED BY THE PRESIDNT. for its discredit and repeal. The
Just about the time you get in inconspicuous place. Now broth­
coming
to?
Give
him
an
inch:
This measure marks a great for­ law was supposed to have gone
the rut in this business, some­ ers this paper is one of the most,
Joe
Curran
far
left
leader
of
the
ward step in the march of human into effect November 4th. The
thing hcippens to jerk you out if not the most, erratic reaction­
NMU
has
a
new
idea.
He
wants
freedom and progress. It removes shipowners had eight months te
.again. The beefs, growls, real and ary publication in the nation to­
the
government
to
take
up
the
the last vestige of involuntary prepare, and nothing was done
imaginary, are the expected lot day. I am^ going to give you one
seamen's
papers
who
have
been
servitude from the laws of the until three days before that time.
of our loc^ trio-Brothers, Dickey, little sentence from the letter and
suspended
by
tliC^MU
for
what
U.S. It is one of the first measures The law provides for issuing cer­
McCaulley, and yours truly Flan­ you will readily understand why
he
calls
misconduct.
By
suspend­
that the AFL urged Congress to tificates to able seamen. No cer­
agan. Along with crew's quar­ the article was handled the way
ing
a
union
member,
old
"Keep
enact
into law. It wiU improve tificates were issued until within
ters, grub, and milk, the current it was.
'Em
Sailing
Joe"
can
deprive
him
the
working
conditions of the four or five days of the 4th of
major issue seems to be this new
of
working
rights
wherever
the
The
letter
was
from
Captain
seamen.
Opportunities
for organ­ November. This caused a tre­
rider 64 issued by the WSA. A
NMU
has
contracts.
But
now
he
ization will be extended, seamen mendous congestion in the differ­
little birdie whom is well up on Walter C. Ernest, Jr., serving in
(Curran,
who
was
against
this
in other countries will enj«y its ent seaports, of men who wanted
maritime law h^s informed me the New Guinea in the United
war
until
his
pal
Mustache
Joe
in
beneficent influence, the general to obtain certificates. As a result
this rider is more or less illegal, States Army, to Representative
Russia
was
attacked)
wants
some
public who travel on the high of that, or for some other reason,
as it is contrary to the wording Frank Boykin, United States
of
the
fellow
moscovietes
in
seas will be afforded a larger the examinations as to physical
of the law pertaining to the al­ Congress, his cousin. Capt. Er­
Washington
to
give
him
a
hand
fitness did not work altogether
nest
stated
in
the
letter
that
he
measure of safety provisions.
lowed period of paying off.
had taken one Engineer company to set ashore everywhere any We feel confident in asserting well or even reasonably satisfac­
The biggest jolt we got this and built a dock to work all five seaman whose conduct offends that the passage of this wise and torily in some places. In other
week was when our dispatcher. hatches of a Liberty ship. He al­ old Hamhead Curran.
necessary legislation by the Sixty places it seems to be going along
Bill Attwood, received an order so stated in the letter: "Oh yes. I
Well, the NMU in Galveston Third Congress was one of its pretty smoothly. When the law
for an entire crew for the SS. must tell you that one Sunday has started the ball rolling, distinctions. Nevertheless, we find shall have been in operation long
• John J. Hawk. The natural re­ the ship had turkey for dinner, none other than a lady seaman it to be a painful duty to call at­ enough so that the smaller offi­
action to this was to be insulted ice cream, etc. The sailors went as dig^patcher.
tention to the fact that a great cials shall be prepared to carry
as the ship was an infamous Iron out on deck and each one picked Brother J. P. Schuler, who is danger still confronts this valu­ it out in an honest and faithftd
Maiden (Liberty Ship), So we out a soldier who was working well known by the membership, able piece of legislation. The way. It will probably prove the
get our wires hot cheeking up on the cargo and gave him his own has arrived in Texas ports aboard cupidity and greed of not only most successful legislation that
the authencity of this attact on place at the table and the sailors a ship that the crew states is the the shipping interests of the U.S. has been adopted in half a cen­
our venerated Scratch, (Sec'ty.- went without dinner. These were best feeder afloat today. He but the shipping interests of the tury.
Treas.) and were relieved to be the sailors of the merchant mar­ wants Casey Jones to leave Col­ whole maritime world are so
1918
informed that an error was made ine. the same old sailors down on lins in control of Philadelphia, aroused that they will leave no
The Shipping Board Emer­
in reference to the name of the Government Street in Mobile. and fly down here to join his stone unturned nor hesitate to
gency Fleet Corporation, fully'
vessel. I withdrew our demand Don't you think that was a won­ ship. Here is a note that was stoop to any subterfuge to defeat
appreciative of the fact that
for an apology from the WSA derful gesture toward the ser­ handed to me by the crew of the law and the wise, humanitar­
workers must be dealt with as
and Calmar Line, but informed vice? I happened to be a guest the S.S
ian and safety provisions that it human beings, reached the con­
them to never scare us that way of the Captain for dinner emd "Re. Austin Brown shipped contains. A continuous, persis­
clusion that labor managers must
again, and if they wanted to in­ that was how I knew it. So the from the RMO, New Orleans, La. tant campaign has been made
deal with the shipping employes
sult all big shots like Charlie Sailors Union isn't so bad after Brothers: The above mentioned against the measure by the great
in an intelligent mamier and
Schwab and such it was O.K., but all and I can vouch for it."
Austin Brown has just completed financial interests of the nation thereby reduce the turnover and
never to desecrate our Scratch's
a trip aboard the S.S
You can readily understand and has proved to be the lousiest under the management of the the causes of discontent and fric­
name on that type of ship.
Chamber of Commerce.
why any letters with words of man that has ever be^n or will The national Chamber of Com­ tion. Under the agreement be­
As we understand it the Vic­
tween the seamen's union and
tory ships are due to be under that nature was printed in a very be shipihates with. In port he merce submitted for referendum the shipping board, schools for
construction soon and in view of inconspicuous place of any Pub­ stays drunk all the time, and at vote of its six hundred affiliated training of men who wish to be­
the fact that the plans for them lication as reactionary as the sea he sucks to make up for lost local Chambers of Commerce, come seamen have been estab­
are supposed to be at least in ac­ Press-Register. This letter was time. If he gets a book there is and other trade bodies represent­ lished. However, this plan has_
cordance with an American idea too significant to get any public­ no use of ever having another in­ ing some 300,000 business men, met with difficulty as certain
vestigating committee."
several propositions, including
of what a ship should be like. We
ity in the Capitalist press. So Twelve full book members the following "Subsidies from the shipping companies have refused
suggest they all be named after brothers from here on in you may
to employ these men even after
our seamen whom have lost their as well prepare yourselves for signed the letter, which is being government sufficient to offset they have been trained, although
sent to headquarters. Have two differences in the cost between
lives through enemy action in­
any eventuality that may con­ new ships out at the end of the operation of vessels under the the members of the seamen's
stead of some politician or use­ front your
union have asked that places be
month. Need good men.
American flag, and operation in made for these men.
less money monger. The ship
E. R. WALLACE. Agent the same deep sea trades under
OLDEN BANKS. Agent
owners can at least tfhow that
1919
foreign flags."
The vote upon
much deferance for these heros
Two
bills
proposing
to strike
these propositions was over­
all.
out
sections
4
and
5
of
the sea­
whelmingly in favor of the one
Narrow-minded Westbrook
men's
act
was
protested
against
quoted. It is therefore necessary
Pegler is at it again. He takes a
by
the
AFL.
Both
failed
of
pas­
that our membership be alert to
couple of isolated cases of mis­
sage.
Called
upon
the
committee
the dangers confronting the peo­
conduct by crew members to use
ple of the U. S., because there is on merchant marine and fisheries
INGEBRITSEN:
You
have
61
Crew
of
S.S.
Able
Stearns
can
as a basis of calling all seamen,
no question that the vested inter­ to investigate violations of the
particularly American seamen, collect port bonus for Sydney. hours overtime coming from the
ests
will exert themselves to the seamen's act and take such steps
TRASH. I would like to invite See Captain Respess. Bull Line. Robin Line.
fullest
extent to defeat the mer­ as would compel its enforcement.
this jerk to make a trip on one New York City.
MCLAUGHLIN: YOU have 8 itorious principles contained in
of .these ships as member of the J. Pantoja has money coming hours overtime coming from the
the seamen's act.
crew or even as a passenger,
from the Bull Line for the last Robin Line.
The licensed officers bill also
don't think he would work up voyage of the Eleanor.
becomes a law. It affords greater
enough -courage to do so. I don't
Any members of crews of fol­ protection to officers in the mer­
even think he would have enough
The following crew members lowing vessels at time of attack, chant marine when complying
bafekbone to work in some war of the S.S. Ironclad have bonus should collect $125 attack bonus with their necessary public duty
industry. Mr. Pegler, this coun­ money .coming from the Water­ from companies: Benjamin La- in reporting defects in their ves­
try doesn't need useless jerks like man Line: L. Hall. A. DeFelice. trobe. Robin Gray. Panama City. sels to the proper federal inspec­ EDWIN L. WEAVER
you to write trash. You can't help E. Bright. J. Lafaso. J. Narovas. Richard Henry Lee. John Daven­ tion officials. The act also more
EUGENE C. RICHEY
to win this war by sitting on your G. Small. J. Naylor. J. McKenna. port. Pan Gulf. Kofresi. John clearly defines and extends the
CLIFFORD F. GRIFFEN
fannie and criticizing the real and E. Talbot.
Sevens. Francis Marion.
right to licensed officers in the RICHARD D. FRANKHAUSER
backbone of this war effort. So
merchant marine to quit the ser­ SAMUEL A. FOWLER
nerts, Mr. Pegler, to you.
FRANKLIN G. HENDERSON
vices of the shipowner at the ex­
KEEP CLEAR WITH YOUR DRAFT BOARD piration of their contract with­ LESLIE B. REED
JOSEPH FLANAGAN
FRANK GREENE
out intimidation or risk of im­
..Agent
By observing the following simple instructions you will
JAMES
THOMPSON
prisonment.
It
is
believed
that
continue to receive deferment from military service. Fail
LEROY
LONNON
all
of
the
former
elements
of
to observe these rules and you may wind up in the army.
WILLIE SMITH
compulsion on the part of the
MOBILE
WHEN SIGNING ON: Give the clerk or skipper all the
WILLIE NELSON
shipowners against the licensed
information necessary to fill out RMO Card Na. 47 (Green
WILLIAM BAKER
officers have be?n removed by
Card).
Well, Brothers it seems like we
the passage of this measure. This JOSE HERNANDEZ
struck the doldrums in this port
act is a valuable addition to the ARTHUR YOUNG
WHEN SIGNING OFF: See that Card No. 48-A is propas far as shipping goes.
THOMAS W. DIMMWIDE
legislation contained in the act
perly filled out by skipper or clerk.
G. KING
protecting
the
I'ights
of
seafaring
But here is a little item I want
Ship out befoio your allotted time ashore has expired.
G.
KASE
men and extending greater safe­
printed in a conspicuous place for
If you have not yet hlled out the Green Card, contact your
J.
CLAHERTY
ty
measures
for
those
who
go
, the benefit of the men. The mon­
draft board and let them Imow that you are sailing.
W. CHAWONICE
down to the sea in ships.
opolistic capitalistic publication

MONEY DUE

.-vr,

�Page Four

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Fridays August 27. 1943

Vigilance Needed To Protect Halls

—\ !

Union Or Collection Agency—-Which?

for^snipping, paid- fine, 6/24/43.
Formerl;
^ Vilbeieto.'E. S, —1715 — Okayed not com
..
for
to carrych**^ bctotc 5.
. — slfftce "
Eote*
fn^ing, •®Pn/43,
'charges Filed, Trials Pending, De­
cisions of Trial Committees, etc.
Baresic, Frank—Contact National
Treasurer before registering or
shipping regarding $125 owed Lyfces
Brothers.
Barker, William—Charges: Anti. conduct; refu

5S.\«
\

tiona
or sh:
Lykes
Fr
Ch

Not to be issued a union book or
shipped through NMU.
or . shipp
.
Beer, H. W.—8832—Charges: De­ Lykes Brl
serted ship after signing foreign
GniazdC
Articles. Action: fi tnnnthg' nrnha- National ''
tinn: alloweiiiim
ing or ^
in six months
wasnig^t the trial.
Iress, IMM IT
,for 99o;^'-^
Behmer, George S.—Contact Na­
uillen
tional Treasurer before registering
Or shipping regarding $125 ov/ed t®ial Tr
shippi
Lykes Brothers.
lykes Brv.
Blsquerra, Amada — 61309
Gnlston/
es: Inefficien
'
National ^'
5ne year; during probation to ob­ OT shippii/
tain letter from ship's ,committee
I'egarding work and conduct^
Bodenes^^Tripca

te

H

Bugh NMU.
Heel
Boone, Kirby D. —Contact Na­
tional Treasurer before registering TreaSuii
r shipping regarding $125 owed .shippir
Broth '
ykes Brothers.
Sby'^e.Brinton, Charles—38737—Charges:
Of,
Conduct unbecoming a union mem^
ripping.
"
3ot do his wotr
Herold,
III, I,
.
leave. A«ion. ExpeTiea indefinite­ tional Tr&gt;
or shinni
ly frbm Union.

Pto

£

°Ofr;

Believe it or not, seamen in the NMU are being prevented from shipping put if they owe
the shipowner dough. Take a look at the above clippings—and they are only part of what ap­
peared in the Aug. 20th issues of THE PILOT. In all, 28 men were listed to be beached if they
didn't pay off the shipowner. Several of them owed as little as $1.50.
Just what in hell is this NMU—a trade union or a collection agency for the shipowner?
Curran and his cabal are trying to get the check-off-from the shipowners. It looks like the ship­
owners already have the check-oR from' the union.
Dear Editor:
Here is a little article I read in
an AFL paper which I think it
would be wise to print. All the
brothers should call it to the at­
tention of the WSA , trainees
When they ride our ships. It has
some good common sense in it.
Yours,
R. G. L.
Would you give odds of a
thousand to one against your­
self?
Nb?
Well, you're doing it when you
"buck the boss" alone.
Here you are, one of a thous­
and employees under one man­
agement. Your pay, we'll say,
averages $1,200 a year. But the
corporation is capitalized at,
we'll say, two or three or four
millions of dollars and is pay­
ing, let us suppose, five, six, seyen or eight per cent on its cap­
italization.
If it is run on conventional
business principles, it has a
"bock log" of half a million or
more. That is, theoretically, to
provide for dull business periods,
etc. Actually it is seldom needed
for those dull business periods,
for then wages are slashed, help
is ruthlessly laid off, and ex­
penses are cut in many other
ways—all of which result in un­
employment.
YOUR GRUB STAKE
You, imorganized, have per­
haps been so thrifty as to have

Editor's
a month's pay saved up; perhaps
even two or three hundred dol­
lars in the bank — if so, you're
the lucky exception — probably
you're just a hop, skip and jump
ahead of three or four install­
ment collectors.
So what? So, the boss decides
to cut your pay—just as you ex­
pected a. raise—or he decides af­
ter consultmg a "deficiency en­
gineer" to make two persons do
three persons' work, or he finds
business is too good and orders
you to work overtime with no
extra pay or at the regular
drawing for your daily eight
hours.
TRUMP TAKES ACE
What can YOU do? He has a
backlog of half a million dollars;
you may, as we said, have as
much as a himdred for your lit­
tle old ace in the hole!
What'Il chance have you got?
You are la free-bom American
citizen; you can^tell the son of
a packsaddle that he is a son of
a packsaddle and then quit.
Sure! It may cost him a few
nickels to break in somebody to
take your place—and how these
capital-management boys can
squawk about the "cost of labor

turnover," and how much it
takes out of the corporation
bankroll to train new help! But
he'll stick to his "principles" and
tell you to go to hell.
Which you may do—go to the
hell of the jobless and broke—
for the old days of easy-to-get
jobs have gone. Oh, yes! Today
if you're in a town full of war
industries tand you're not "fro­
zen," it's fairly easy to get some­
thing else to do; but, remember,
that's purely, even damnably,
temporary.
When this war is over, we'll go
back more or less to things as
they were in the "dirty thirties,"
as they even were In the early
twenties.
So, you see, the odds against
you are at least a thousand to
one. You—poor little you, with
your hundred bucks — are up
against a bankroll of two or
three millions, with half a mil­
lion or so handy just to "take
care" of little things like you.
BE A BLUE CHIP
But, suppose you join a union!
Then you are not one little white
cliip up against a big stack of'
blues—you are part of a big

to the RMO Fink hall. And in
{Continued from Page 1)
RMO sends and can call for an­ most every port you can take it '
other man in the rejected man's for granted that they are making
every sneak move that they can
Every Agent should check the with the hope of eventually un­
discharges of men other than dermining breaking the Union in
trainees that the RMO send to order that their fink halls and
them, because here is where the their fink herding jobs will be
RMO stooges for the NMU and sure.
ALL THROUGH HALL
there are plenty of them in this
There is no excuse for allowing
outfit, sneak over thpir dirty
work on the SIU by sending the RMO to dispatch men direct­
NMU commies to us or directly ly to our ships at anytime. It is '
to the ship to disrupt the ship up to every Agent to be on his
and attempt to organize the crew, toes to safeguard our hiring hall
this is exactly what happened on rights by demanding that the
the 2 ships that paid off here with companies live up to their agree­
the NMU organizers aboard. The ments and order all men through
RMO slid these men through our Union hiring halls. If we need
when our Agents were not on the RMO men then the^Agent can
order the men from the RMO di­
job.
rectly with the absolute under­
JERK ALL PHONIES
standing with the RMO that they
On examining a guy's dis­ are to send the men to our Union
charges you can get a line on a Hall and we will dispatch the
guy if he looks the least fishy. The men ^ to the ships. If the Com­
Agent should immediately reject pany or the RMO dispatch men
him. It might be a better policy directly to a ship, take these men
to reject every man that the off the ship and make them go to
RMO sends to the Union except the Union Hall if you see fit to
bonifide trainees. At least we clear these men or else reject
know the trainee isn't a fink or them and chase them off the ship.
The ships generally sail in
disrupter and we have a chance
convoy
now days and are in port
of making him a good Union
man and a good seamen. On the •long enough so that plenty of
other hand, any guy thats been time is available to crew up even
up with
around the waterfront a year or if you have to fill
trainees.
Don't
let
the
RMO
hold
more knows what the score is
you
off
for
a
pier
head
that
is
and if he continues to ship out
one
of
their
main
angles
to
look
the RMO Fink hall he is a fink
at heart and he is a detriment to for the excuse that our hall was
us, therefore, we don't want that closed. For they know that once
their trainee is shipped through
type.
One thing for all Agents to re­ our Union hall that man is lost to
member is that the RMO fink them and 9 chances out of 10 ha
hall is supposed only to supple­ will become a member of this
ment the Union hiring hall man­ Union.
Bring it to the attention of the
power needs and also the man­
members
that it is their duty as
power needs of non-union com­
well
as
the
ship's delegate to
panies such as Isthmian and
make
sure
that
all crew members
Standard Oil.
of the ship they are on have
Of course, I know that some
cleared through the Union hall
RMO officials try to impress the
and if not notify the local Branch
Union officials that the Union Agent.
' ,
Hiring halls are supplementary
DOUBLE CHECK
Do your duty and make it your
stack of blues yourself. You have
a trained man to fight for your business to see that all replace­
rights. You have two or three ments for SIU and SUP ships in
hundred, or perhaps a thousand your port are shipped and cleared
fellow "chips" in the stack, all through our- Union hall.
Every month the RMO sends
bound togethei; by the iwwerful
out
figures
on the number of
tie of labor unionism;
Able
Seamen,
Oilers, Firemen
Behind you there is a collec­
and
Cooks,
etc.;
that • they have '
tive bankroll, amassed from the
dispatcher
to
SIU
ships. In order
initiation fees and dues you and
to
check
on
the
accuracy
of their
your fellow workers have paid
figures, I am hereby requesting
into the local's treasury.
When trouble comes you carry that every branch Agent forward
your "beef" to the union's busi­ to me weekly the RHiO shipping
ness agent. He goes to see the. cards that they give to each man
boss—or ex-boss, as'the case that they dispatch to our Halls. .
may be—and says:
"See here, mister! You can't
do that to a member "of Local
1313!"
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Presi­
And if the Big Boss Man gets dent Roosevelt imposed sanctions
all swelled up and says,' "Why against unions refusing to comply
not?"—^why, then, the business with decisions of the National
agent gets him told, and in no War Labor Board.
uncertain terms.
In the case of labor refusing to
"Because," he says, "I'm not comply with WLB directives, the
just speaking for Bill Jones. I'm Selective Service System was
speaking for all of the thousand authorized to cancel draft defer­
members of Local 1313 who are ments of recalcitrant individual
employed here. Either you give employes. Power was also grant­
Bill la square deal or else—!"
ed to withhold in escrow ,union
Then Bill gets a square deal dues collected under union agree­
because the odds were even in­ ments by employers in plants
stead of a thousand to one.
seized by the Government be­
That's why you, brothers and cause of strikes.
The latter provision was wide­
sisters, lare better off in the
union, and that's why your fel­ ly interpreted as an attempt to
low workers who are now unor­ forestaU any further strike action
ganized are fools to give odds by the United Mine Workers
when they could have an even Union whose case is , still pend­
ing before the War Labor Board. break.

FDR Puts Teeth

..III

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                <text>Vol. V, No. 22</text>
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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
VIGILANCE NEEDED TO PROTECT HALLS&#13;
WE PURCHASE MORE WAR BONDS&#13;
AFL OPENS POLITICAL CAMPAIGN&#13;
HIGH PRAISE FOR SIU CREW COMES FROM SKIPPER&#13;
FOUNDER OF LABOR DAY RECEIVES ANNUAL HONOR&#13;
NO VICTORY TAX LEVIED ON TRANSPORTATION MONEY&#13;
FAR-FETCHED RUSE TO BAN UNION BUTTONS&#13;
NO VICTORY TAX LEVIED ON TRANSPORTATION MONEY&#13;
FAR-FETCHED RUSE TO BAN UNION BUTTONS&#13;
FDR PUTS TEETH</text>
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                <text>8/27/1943</text>
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                    <text>SECURITY
IN
UNITY
VOL. V.

m

OFFIOIAL OBOAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTEIGT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AIOERICA
NEW YORK, N. Y„ FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 3. 1943

No. 23

Gulf Fishermen Make First
Big Gains Under SlU Banner
WIN CLOSED SHOP AT HIGGINS
The Gulf District Towboatmen
of the SIU have been designated
as the exclusive bargaining
agents for all licensed and un­
licensed personnel, boat operat­
ors, deck hands, and all other
ratings on floating equipment in
the i^iggins Ship Yards of New
Orleans, Louisiana by the Nation­
al Labor Relations Board.
We have been fighting to break
into this yard for over a year as
a lot of work is being done in this
shipyard such as testing boats,
operating towboats, rigging, etc.
by members of other unions ancl
quite a number of non-union
men, but have always run up
against a brick wall.
REINSTATEMENTS WON
After getting enough pledge
cards signed to cover a majority
of these men, the company made
thei mistake of firing some of the
meg who had joined the SIU for
union activities arid made such
an entry on the men's file cards.
We immediately filed an unfair
labor practice'charge against the
company with the result that the
men were placed back to work
after a five week layoff. These
men received pay for all the
time they were out including
Saturdays, Sundays and holidays.
The NLRB also designated that
the SIU towboatmen were ex­
clusive bargaining agents and ne­
gotiations were started with the

Local Hearings Desired
By New Shipping Panel

I

John B. Bryan, one of the two
industry representatives of the
newly created War Shipping Pan­
el of the National War Labor
Board, in a recent interview,
stated that it is his understanding
that cases in dispute may, upon
request, be heard by the panel at
the locale of the dispute.
In the case of such local hear­
ings it is expected that the indus­
try member nearest the location
will sit on the panel together
with the labor member from the
craft affected.
The public member would be
the chairman of the local hearing
and if neither the chairman nor
deputy chairman of the panel,
both being public members, are
available, a special public mem­
ber would be appointed by the
NWLB to serve as chairman of
the local hearing.
The proposed new arrangement
would greatly speed up the han­
dling of disputes, particularly
those arising at points distant
from Washington, D. C.

Keep In Touch With
Your Local Draft Board,

company immediately.
At the present time some pro­
gress has been made toward
completing the agreement and
we hope to iron out the remain­
ing points at a meeting on Sep­
tember 3.
This new gain, along with 75
new towboats being delivered to
different companies in the Gulf,
should give the towboatmen a
large increase in membership and
a chance to expand throughout
the entire Gulf area. At the

present time the SIU towboat­
men are the only union members
on the Industrial Canal. How­
ever, we still have several large
companies operating on the In­
dustrial Canal at below our scale.
The towboatmen have also
been in negotiation with the
Coyle Line and River Terminals
Corporation for an increase in
wages and the 8 hour day, but
this case will probably end up
before the Maritime Panel of the
War Labor Board.

St. Petersburg Buyers Sign;
700 Continue Strike Against
Remaining Florida Holdouts
By Matthew D, Biggs
(SIU Vice President)

In June of this year a group of fishermen in St. Peters­
burg, Fla., organized themselves into a union and immedi­
ately made application for a charter with the SIU. I was
instructed at this time to proceed to St. Petersburg and set
up a new district for the fishermen in the Gulf of Mexico.

•At the first meeting held here.
over 200 fishermen attended and
drew up a constitution and by­
laws for what is now known as
"The Gulf Coast District Fisher­
men's Union" affiliated with the
SIU.
This was the beginning of an
No one would deny that the War Shipping Administration, maritime labor's No. 1 organization
that has grown so
enemy, is both tireless and resourceful in its campaign against the unions.
fast in the past two months, it
This week, however, one of the WSA labor busting projects exploded right in its has almost been impossible to
face—and through no effort of the unions eitheir. The New York office of the RMQ keep up^ith the new branches.
gave direct lie to Captain Macauley's slanders against the SIU that our ship were missing During the first of July, the fish
buyers on the west coast of Flo­
convoys due to manning difficulties.
rida
attempted to cut the price
A few. weeks ago we received
of fish 2c per pound overnight,
a pre-emptory letter from Cap­
but the organized fishermen tied
tain Macauley in which he charg­
ed that our ships were missing up the boats and within 48 hours
convoys, and demanded that we the strike had ended with the
violate our own shipping customs fishermen getting the prices they
by forcing men to sign deep sea demanded. They learned by this
articles the moment they took a action what organization could
newly commissioned ship out of do for them and the other ports
started sending in for someone
the yard.
from the SIU to attend meetings
Two weeks ago we reported the victory of the union in
' At that time the servile NMU in their ports and set up branch­
the Schoharie beef. This historic victory turned back a WSA
accepted Macauley's proposal, but es. During the following three
the SIU denounced it for what it weeks. Steely White and I cov­
inspired offensive against the working rules of our contracts,
was — union busting — and de­ ered as much of this territory as
and resulted in plenty of overtime money for deck and engine
manded
that Macauley present we possibly could with the re­
men who were forced to break watches in violation of the con­
proof that our ships were missing sult that branches of this Gulf
tract. These men can collect from the South Atlantic to the
convoys. The proof, of course, Coast District Fishermen's Union
tune of 90 cents per hour.
were set up at Tarpon Springs,
was never presented.
Cedar Keys, Hudson, Cortez,
Hours of
Money
This week a publicity release Dunnellon, Crystal River and
Overtime
Coming
from
the RMO office of Mr. Craig Homosassa, Flordia.
RAFAEL T. SALAS (AB)
316
$284.40
Vincent
in New York, read,
JAMES K. KANE (AB)
.......316
284.40
STRIKE VOTE
"Over
the
entire extent of the
OQDEN FIELDS (Oiler)
316
284.40
Atlantic Coast there has been but
ANGELO MEGLIO (Fireman)
316
284.40
buyers along the
one ship delay in the American The fish
316
284.40*
[Florida
coast
realized that this
flag merehant fleet due to crew
THOMAS J. CLARK (Oiler)
395
355.50
organization
was
spreading
shortage or crew trouble in the
JULIO FERNANDEZ (Watertender) ....395
355.50
throughout
the
entire
Gulf and
past ten weeks ..."
FRANCIS MASTERSON (Fireman) . ..395
355.50
started reducing prices below and
EDWARD POUQUETTE (OS)
406
365.40
Where are all these SIU ships above St. Petersburg where the
HENRI GAILLARD (AB)
485
436.50
that are tied up because of crow­ headquarters have been estab­
ing difficulties?
485
436.50**
lished. The result of this was
JAMES W. ROONEY (AB)
500
450.00
that the branches from Cedar
Who's lying—Vincent or Mac­ Keys to Sarasota, Florida, covCHARLES CONNORS (Oiler)
..553
497.70
auley?
MERTON DELANEY (Watertender) ....553
497.70
(Continued on Page 4)
ALBERT BERNSTEIN (Fireman)
553
497.70
Vincent's office is certainly in
JOHN P. JASON (OS)
553
497.70
a position to know the facts, and
Same Old Story
JOE MOHOWSKI (AB)
643
478.70
we maintain that this time he has
PHILIP McQUADE (AB) .
. 658
592.20
given them straight. Not that
Vincent is any friend of labor; his "The Atlantic Gulf &amp; West In­
$7,338.60
TOTAL
.8,154
double cross of Macauley flows dies Steamship Lines and sub­
from inter-department jealousies sidiary companies, reported a
*This amount to be split between two ordinaries on the
and desire to make it appear that gross profit before taxes of $2,12 to 4 wotch. Exact division not yet worked out.
his department is successfully 910,894 for the six months ended
**This amount to be split between Watertender that was
shouldering the full responsibility June 30, as comparied with $1,paid off and the wiper that was promoted. Exact di­
for crewing the ships. In other 204,059 for a comparable period
vision not yet worked out.
last year."
(Continued on Page Ay
—Journal of Commerce
(Continued on Page 4)

Macauley ^Missed Convoy'
Smear Of SIU Is Elxposed

These Men Cash In
On The Schoharie
Overtime Beef

�THE

Page Two

&gt;E '

k
i :

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

SEAFARERS" INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District

SEAFARERS

M

LOG

Friday, September 3. 1943

f-.

&lt;^ASHIt\GTOrV.

g BV M/i'tT44^W - DySt4AftiE&gt;^ ^ ^

Was notified that the AFL Post merchant marine and fisheries. the seamen had reported that the
War Planning Committee has Representatives . of the vessel U. S. Shipping Board has issued
HARRY LUNDEBERG ------ "President. designated me on the suh-com- owners, seamen and the shipping statements that it "WOULD NOT
mittee to study and report on board were appointed on a com­ GIVE AGENTS OF THE
110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.
racial discrimination and minor­ mission to inquire into the pro- UNIONS THE PRIVILEGES OE
JOHN HAWK ------- Secy-Treds,
ity groups. This coThrnittee has pdse&lt;^ changes, hut the commis­ VISITING DOCKS OR SHIPS"
not met yet so do not know what sion failed to agree. Notwith­ and that "NO NEW AGREE­
P. O. Box 25, Station P., New York City
the score is. WiU keep the mem­ standing this, and while the com­ MENT WOULD BE RATIFIED
MATTHEW DUSHANE * - - - Washington Rep.
bership advised in later rehorts. mission was still in session, the FOR LONGER THAN SIX
bill was presented to the House MONTHS." The seamen declared
424 5tli Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
WAR SHIPPING PAl^EL
and
passed. It is now before the they would refuse to agree to
•
•
All ,SIU and SUP cases are stiU
Senate.
The hill reduces the this policy, accepting prosecution
being processed and no definite
Directory of Branches
number
of
able seamen on a ves­ and suffering instead.
^ ,
date has been set for hearings on
sel
from
65
to
40
per
cent,
and
1922
these cases.
PHONE
ADDRESS
BRANCH
General Petroleum Corp and the training period from three HR 6754, passed the House hut
NEW YORK (4)
2 Stone St
BOwIing Green 9-3437
met with opposition in the Sen­
SUP-SIU companies have re­ years to nine months.
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
ate. The hill seeks to amend sec­
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Gay St
Calvert 4539
1921
quested the WLB for a review of
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St
Lombard 7651
their cases on all recommenda­
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
A bill was introduced in the tions 2, 13, 14, of the seamen's
NEW ORLEANS (16) ..309 Chartres St
Canal 3336
tions by a regional hoard or the Senate to provide compensation act. It provides that the life sav­
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St
Savannah 3-1728
TAMPA
423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
panel. The union or the employ­ fof searheri and the dependents of ing equipment on vessels during
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St
Dial 2-1392
er are privileged to request for a searhen killed in the course of the summer mbnths shall be re­
PUERTO RICO....
45 Ponce de Leoh
Puerto de Tierra
GALVESTON..
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-8043
review. After a hearing is held employment and to create a fed­ duced 25 per cent ahd that the
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway ... Ft. Lauderdale 1601
on a review, either party is again eral seamen's compensation fund. number of able seamen provided
accorded the privilege to request It provides that immediately af­ for by the seamen's act shall he
a review before the full board ter injury sustained by a seaman reduced from 65 per cent to 50
PUBLICATION OFFICE:
here in Washington. After the he shall receive all necessary per cent. The hill also provides
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
full board makes a decision the medical and surgical aid and hos­ for twelve hour watches for fire­
New York City
BOwIing Green 9-8344
case is settled.
pital supplies. In the event of a men, watertenders, and oilers.
total disability he shall receive Representative John I. Nolan, of
SELECTIVE SERVICE
a
weekly compensation equal to California, made a fight on these
Advise all agents that are clas­
provisions and succeeded i n
sified in any other than 2-B, or 66-2/3 per cent of his weekly amending the hill so that em­
other deferable status, to imme­ earnings. If only temporarily ployes in the occupations should
diately request for deferment disabled he shall receive a week­ work only eight hours, but they
now and not wait until they are ly compensation equal to 66-2/3 failed to prevent a reduction in
reclassified in 1-A. Don't forget per Cent of his loss in earning the number of able seamen em­
that nearly all local hoards are capacity. The weekly compensa­ ployed. The reduction in the life
now down to the bottom of the tion for total disability shall not
Consultation of the seamen's democratic labor everywhere in barrel and are reclassifying men be more than $25.00 nor less than saving equijiment and the proVigi
ion that it is not necessary that
movement on all matters of post rebuilding the European trade in 1-A who formerly held other $10.00 unless the seamen's com­
union moyement after the war. classifications. In the last bulle­ pensation shall be the fuU amount able seamen he employed in
war shipping and adequate labor
manning the life boats and life
"Fortunately," he pointed out,
tin that was issued by the War of his weekly earnings. No action rafts gave the hill the title of
representation in all international
"our plans are ready and we are Manpower Commission to Selec­ was taken on the bill. Protested
transportation and shipping con­
"DROWNING MADE EASY."
getting the right support In mak­
tive Service on essential workers, against any lowering of the num­ The original hill provided tha^
ferences were emphatically de­
ing sure that the new labor
the only ones classified as essen­ ber of skilled men, and increase there should be a sufficient num­
manded by J. H. Oldenbroek,
movement of Europe will take its
tial in the maritime industry are in the horns of labor or any ex­ ber of boats and rafts on each'
acting general secretary of the
proper place in the reconstruc­
Masters, Licensed Deck Officers, tension of the season in which vessel to save only 25 per cent
International Transport Workers'
tion of the continent.
Chief Engineers, and Licensed passenger vessels are permitted instead of 50 per cent of the pas­
Federation, in an address before
the recent annual congress of the Speaking of the future of Ger­ Ehgine room officers. All other to operate in a condition in which sengers in case of fire br ship­
National ' Union of Seamen of man trade unionism, the execu­ classifications of maritime work­ 50 per cent of the persons on wreck. The seamen in entering
board have ho means of safety
Great Britain.
tive officer of the ITF observed; ers were left out. We are trying except life preservers, the utility ohjeetion tb this feature of the
The congress, which demon­ "What we are out to do is help to have the old ratings reclassi­ of whi&lt;:h were shown in the loss bill declared that the shihownei's
strated the strength of the Brit­ Germany and German workers fied again. Seems that some one of the Empress of Ireland, in the now have the legal right t(j
in the WMC does not feel that
drown 50 per cent of the persons
ish seafarers' movement, was
(iestroy the militarism and feud­ uhliceiised seamen are necessary St. Lawrence river in May, 191^, they carry but want the legal
similarly addressed by other in­
Where, according to reports 1,027
ternational and British labor alism which they have never or essential to the War eiffiirt.
persons drowned with life pre­ right to drown 75 per cent. Thig
leaders and representatives of managed to destroy theniselves.
Mi^EB
servers on within less than three argiimeht corhpblled the House to
the British Government. Among We have already told German
Notified that the advisory miles from shore and with as­ reject the proposed reduction to
the speakers was Frank Switzer, workers that we won't judge board's meeting was postponed as sistance coming in less than two 25 per cent, and retain the 50 per
cent law. CaUed upon the feder­
Etiropean representative of the them by Nazi deeds but by their they did not have anything on hours.
al governnient to enforce all laws
American Railway Labor Execu­ own deeds.
the agenda. Contacted the secre­
Indorsed Senate hill providing enacted to'provide greater safety
tives' Association and liaison of­
tary of the board. What happen­
ficer between the American and
ed to our proposals regarding the for investigation of the lockout of at sea.
Strikers
Not
"Idlers"
European transport labor move­
hoard reinstating the bonuses seamen by a combination of Eu­
ment, who reaffirmed American
that were in effect prior to March ropean and American shipowners I.T.F. GAINS NEW
WASHINGTON — When the 1st, and how about the seamen's aided by the U. S. Shipping
labor's interest in the future wel­
fare of European labor. He stat­ WMC declared idleness a "non- 2nd war risk insurance policy? Board. The AFL compliments AFFILIATE
ed amid applause that the Ameri­ deferrable activity," there was no Wc were advised by the hoard the seamen upon their unchang­
ed and undiminished patriotism, NEW YORK, N. Y.^Affiliation
can railway workers were pre­
intention of including strikers, that 60 days after that insurance their self sacrifice to America's of the Gulf Coast Fishermen's
pared to render full financial and
went into effect, the unions and
moral support to the reconstruc­ Lawrence A. Appley, WMC exe­ the operators were to meet and interest and their loyalty to the Union, composed of commercial
tion of the shattered trade union cutive director, told a press con­ discuss changes; in the policy. We principles hf human freedom. fishermen along the west coast
forces of Europe.
ference.
have never met on this problem, This defclaratiori Was made after of Florida, with the Seafarers' In­
ternational Union of North Am­
Mr. OldcnhrOck also empha­ "We meant onlychronicidlers," still the hoard states that they
erica,
an affiliate of the Interna­
had nothing on the agenda. It
sized the vital task of free and he said.
tional
Transport Workers' Feder­
seems to me that the only part of
ation,
was
announced by the Am­
any agreement that any govern­
erican
office
of the ITF.
ment agency thinks is valid, is
KEEP, CLEAR WITR YOUR DRAFT BOARD the
The fi.shermen's action in affil­
no strike clause, other clauses
iating with the Seafarers' Union
By observing the following simple instructions you will
or parts of agreements that a
followed a recent tie-up of comcontinue to receive deferment from military service. Fail
union may have to them are
rnerclM fishing boats along the
P. SPORNEHR
to obseire thei^e rules ind you may wind np in the army.
merely scraps Df paper.
W.
JOHNSON
Florida wesit coast by members of
WHEN SiGNING ON: Give the clerk or skipiper all the
LEGISLATION
M. TARTAGLIA
the union in protest against the
information necei9sary td fill out RA16 Card No. 47 (Gteen
Continuation of the fight led by J. D. HOOK
lowering
of prices paid by whole­
Card).
Andrew Furuseth for seamen's J. STURDEWANT
sale dealers for the catch. Paul
rights, and the action taken at dBcAk RIVBRA
WHEN SIGNING OFF: See, that Card No. 48-A is prppGrosser, president of the union,
the convention of the AFL.
perly filled out by skipper or olerk.
A. GUSMAH
stated that government represen­
GEORGE SPRINGETT
tatives were making, effort to
• 1920
Ship oiit befdte yo^ stUdtled time
hds ex^iked.
FRANK
GREEN
hiring
about .an amicable settle­
HR
9692;
Was
SUBmitted
td
the
If you have hot yet BUed oikt the Green Card; contact your
WILLIAM
PITTS
ment
hetWeeli
the fishermen and
United
States
Shipping
hoard
for
draft board and let tliw know that you are sailing.
the Whbl'esalefs.
AUSTIN BROWN
an opinion by the committee on
Affiliated with the American Pederation of Labor

yoice In Fost War Planning
Asked By Maritime Labor

•

j

�Friday, September *3, 1943

WHArs Donns

THE

SEAFARERS

LOQ

Pasb tteie«i 1

Roosevelt Decrees
Shackle Labor Unions

NEW YORK

Currari a cbmmie and the NMU no man then to sail during the
Reactionary elements moved form where they will be disci­
cqpimie controlled, then the pick­ midst of a war for his party.
rapidly last week to further plined by labor-hating brass hats.
et line was on.
Further and more so, I wonder shackle labor in the name of the The Roosevelt decree was is­
The publicity department of
the N.M.U. has scored again! We have no illusions. Pegler is if moose-jaw figured the check­ war effort, but none moved more sued to strengthen the notorious
Newspapers all over the country against Us and we are against off system which the rank and swiftly and decisively than Presi­ Smith-Connally Act. This move
carry the story of "TWO THOUS­ him. Pegler is rich and natur file demands (sic) would be too dent Roosevelt himself. By an came as a blow to those leaders
AND FIVE HUNDRED SEAMEN ally protects the interests of the hard to talk the officials into. It executive order he established of the labor movement who have
PICKET THE N. Y. WORLD- bosses while We who are poor (the booklet on the subject) states severe penalties for any worker generally looked upon the White
TELEGRAM IN PROTEST working' sTTflS* protect our inter­ that this will give the patrolmen who strikes in protest against House as friend and champion.
through the medium of our more time to settle beefs. My any War Labor Board decision.
AGAINST PEGLER ARTICLES. ests
Typical of the bewilderment of
unions.
The decree subjects the trade
uridefstandirig
is
that
all
that
is
the
boys who put all their eggs in
. Well and good/ Pegler's a
The sort of crap the NMU is needed to settle beefs in the NMU unions to some of the most Roosevelt's basket, is the com­
phony, but Curranitcs and
sweeping restrictions in the coun­ ment of Johnathan Stout, Wash­
Stalinites couldn't see their way putting out is nothirig more or was a red pencil to scratch out try's history.
more
than
the
mate
did.
less
than
a
chebp
form
of
poariu
ington correspondent for the New
clear to join the SIU-SUP picket
Here are the three principal Leader, organ of the Social-Dem­
line in that bonus fight. The pres­ politics and the damage it does
effects of the order:
ocrats, (Administration support­
ent war bonus was won through to organized labor is great.
rtfe-HE-Rb
1. It imposes compulsory arbi­ ers from way back):
A
picket
line
is
an
economic
a strike and picket lines but
tration on the workers. They "But the President's Executive
again the Moscow boys steered weapon, a weapon of dignity and The Convention ordered
must abide by War Labor Board Order . . . shores up all the weak
coiurage.
Our
brothers
have
died
ciedr.
The meri obeyed
decisions. If they don't, the points (from the bosses' point of
on
picket
lines
and
our
wages
Where in the hell did the 2500
While the rank and file sat back plant in which they work can be view) of the Connally Act and
and
conditions
have
been
won
on
"seamen pickets" come from?
and wondered
seized by the government, and really makes it an efficient oper­
Certainly not oft the ships be­ picket lines.
Our he-he-fo sailed away.
all their rights and benefits under ating anti-labor instrument.
Labor
itself
is
a
thing
of
dig­
cause the picket line parade took
the union contract can be abro­
"That this should be done by
To
get
to
Russia
was
his
aim
nity
and
Union
membership
is
a
^ place during working hours. Cergated.
the
man who vetoed the Connally
So
as
Bos'n
he
did
ship.
badge
of
honor.
The
antics
of
the
' taihiy not oft the beach because
Act
is what stunned Labor cir­
2.
It
re-establishes
the
hateful
To
do
or
die
out
o'er
the
main
NMU
Coirimie
stooges
clearly
the records show that the NMU
hdd to ship replacements from show that the "four freedoms" And prove his worth in Red "blacklist"—this time administer­ cles. When labor-baiters like
Stateship.
ed 1&gt;y the government instead of Smith and Connally write antithe WSA pool even while the are meaningless to the Commurilabor legislation, there is little
the private employer.
pick'eteers were picketing and ist bureaucracy at horiie and His column it was left fiat,
3. It lays down the ultimatum occasion for gasps and surprises.
John Rogan was leading abroad.
dis ghost writers on vacation.
Workers who But that a friend of labor should
his flock' of long haired boys We believe in the freedom of The brains are not beneath his "work or fight."
protest boss provocations may do so . . . !"
and short haired gals into the the press and all freedoms. We
hat,
What labor now fully under­
have fought Westbrook Pegler
Telegram building.
Thank God crys a suffering have their draft deferments can­ stands is that Roosevelt's origin­
celled and be shoved into a imiDon't fool yourself though! from the beginning and wiU con­
Nation.
al veto of the Smith-ConnaUy
There were 2500 people on that tinue to fight him, in the Ameri­
Bill
was but a meaningless ges­
can
way.
Our
weapons
and
our
He spoke his liries and played his
picket line arid all twerity-ifLve
ture,
that he made no real
labor
press,
although
puny
when
Intercoastal Shipping effortsand
part.
hundred carried paid up bpoks in
to
have
his veto sustained.
measured
in
pulp,
are
mighty,
in
Left home sweet home where
the N.M;U. They are the same
Moreover,
his
recent moves to
things are humming.
2500 that pack the headquarters effect. For ourselves, we find
Resumption of i n t e rcoastal strengthen the act make it ex­
nieeting when the commies have it difficult to either read or be­ To Limey Land to get his start shipping services — whether pri­ tremely unlikely that labor will
a special resolution to put over. lieve dhe Moscow pre-fabricated Distributing The Yanks Are Not vate or official operation—is be­ be successful in its present drive
Comirig.
ing seriously considered by the to have the bill repealed at the
They are the same 2500 that columns of Mike Gold in the
Daily
Worker
and
Curran
in
the
War Shipping Administration and next session^ of Congi-ess.
voted against participation in the
legitimate picket lines during the Pilot. At least Pegler's technique Shipping here in the garden Maritime Commission.
In the meantime," Washington
fihk hall fights, the bonus fights is better arid his style more in­
Spurred
to
action
by
the
Office
is
moving full steam ahead to
spot
oif
trie
world
is
very
very
arid the Alcoa strike. They are teresting, although in their own slow. More men than the law of Defense Transportation it is jail workers who resist the Smithways
both
he,
Curran
arid
Gold
the same 2500 that expell any
calls for, quite a few west coast expected that some move will be Connally umon crusher. On Aug.
seaman militant enough to open­ serve the same purpose, the des­ ships are keepirig the deck mov­ made shortly to place ships in the 30 twenty-seven members of the
ly hght the coirimie pie-cards. Out truction of the labor movemerit. ing. Steward and engine are intercoastal trade for the purpose Umted Mine Workers received
of this 2500 caine the Marchers- Sirre racketeers have been slower than I am.
of relieving the transcontinental six-month suspended prison sen­
td-Washington, the picketeers found in the labor movement,
,
and Southwestern railroads from tences and three years probation
Why, oh why, do we have so the strain imposed by the in­ from a Federal Court in Pitts­
against British Imperialism, the but thank God not so mifny
gahg who heljied the League for as the boss controlled press, the much trouble lately with allot­ creasingly heavy traffic moving burgh. These men were convict­
Peace and Bureaucracy picket •Communist Party and the Na­ ments? Companies that have from east of the Mississippi to ed because they ..struck for a liv­
tional Association Manufacturers. been more then exact on this are California ports.
the White NoUse.
ing wage in the coal fields.
We
also tiake pride in the fact now being late on these pay­
YoU can find these 2500 Ship­
leies seamen any day you warit to; that "We have a medium of rid­ ments. It isn't a bit funny when
woman with a couple of kids
at the commie rallies in Madison ding ourselves of undesirables.
The
medium
of
open
discussion,
depends
on the money her hus­
Square Garden, Manhattan Cen­
of
referendum
vote.
The
medium
band
is
leaving
her and the crieck
ter, the Polo grounds, Unibri
of
Democracy,
the
American
anywhere
from
one to three
Square or ariywhere. They are
weeks late. I think about one
jiri'^lihg cbllectibh cans, peddling medium.
JOiE VbLPlAifl, Patrolman good law suit oft this would snap
Daily Workers, passing out leaf­
all hands out of it.
lets and waving fantastic water
color placards.
We have had a little trouble
NEW ORLEANS
The decision against the South Atlantic Company for violation
They take their suriimer vaca-:
i ately with the crews the NMU of present working agreements, and the payment of overtime for
tibhs at Cairip Uriity and NitFirst arid fo'reiriost, fori the last have been puttmg aboard these the crew of the S.S. SCHOHARIE involved, was good news for the
gadaget and s'et the date for the
few weeks the entry ftorii this west coast ships. A lot of the members in our organization.
revolution at the tables of Kavboys don't like some of the men
There were only a few members of the crew of the S.S. SCHO­
kas, the Village Vanguard, Cafe cornier has been missirig, sad but that are shipped and the result is
true.
The
spirit
didn't
move
or
HARIE
who raised the beef about the breaking of watches, and who
Society Downtowri arid a thous­
words to that effect. (No sir that they pile off the scow and brought the beef to Headquarters for the benefits of all the men
and other joints. They are the
Baidy, not the bottled spirits, you we have to dig up replacements. irivolved. We always contend that if a ship's crew has three men
commie reserve force who are
Personally I believe our troubles
know that always moves me.)
who know the score, there will be less beefs for the Patrolmen to
furriers, needle trades workers,
To catch up with the news of are now over, R. Davis of the Pa­ handle when the ship arrives in a home port. You'll meet brothers
cafeteria workers, plumbers, taxithe World, in case you birds can't cific Coast MFOW&amp;W is now in who beef aboard a ship about everything and when the ship re­
cab drivers, br irieiribers of any
keep up with the papers, 'the war town to take care of the MFOW
outfit they can sneak into for the is now in the bag. For proof our iri the Gulf. To break him in we turns home they're the first to pay off and that's the end of it. These
are the men who carry a book and Who tell you what militant men
glory of dear old "Pal Joey."
Hamheaded friend is so sure that had the Utahan in with a trans­ they are.
Sure, Westbrook Pegler is un­
Uncle Sam doesn't need him that portation beef, we both made it
AAA
fair to all labor. So is Mike Gold he broke out of his high pressure and we told the boys to sit tight.
who conducts a "Column for the
and took off. Greater love hath
ARMY, Agent
We were on our vacation for the past two w§eks, visiting Balti­
"Dirty Worker." So far as col­
more
and Norfolk, and finally windinig up in up-State New York.
umnists go it's pretty hard -to
We
had
dinner with Joe-Flanagan. Attended a meeting while there,
firid any of them pro labor. But
and
had
a few drinks with Paul Hall at Joe's Tavern. While there
ATLANTIC
AND
GULF
SHIPPING
FOB
Pegler isn't being picketed be­
we
met
Peggy
O'Shaughnessy for the first time.
cause he is anti-labor. The NMU
WEEK OF AUG. 16 tO 21 INCLUSIVE
•In
Norfolk
we had a hard time finding the Branch Office, until
didn't picket Pegler when he in­
we
almost
walked
into the Portsmouth ferry. The boys are kept
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL
sinuated that seamen were a
busy
there,
with
all
these new ships coming to their port. There is
bunch a bad actors. They didn't
SHIPPED
294
260
200
754
^nly
one
good
restaurant
in thfe town and its hard to get any drinks.
even picket him when he conThe
boys
say
they
would
appreciate if any of the fellows coming
doried lynchings in San Jose, Cal­
REGISTERED
243
270
627
114
dowri
from
New
Yrirk
would
bring some liquor along and they wili
ifornia and heckled their patron,
gladly
pay
them
for
it.
St. Eleanor. But when he called

Out of the Focs^l
by

S"

P

k.ViiL'u.'Ww

:'.;i -.J,

�:,,j;--.-T'v..:W'

Page Four

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, Sopiember 3, 1943

Big Gains Under SlU Banner
f*

buyers that recognized the union.
Since that time the Florida Fish
Exchange has fought us with
everything they have including
some of the highest paid lawyers
in the State of Florida.
In one port they have control
of the icehouse and to date the
icehouse has refused to deliver
ice to any fisherman who is a
member of the union. We are de­
manding a federal investigation
of the entire operations of the
Florida Fish Exchange and also
cases of discrimination against
members of the union through
ice houses and supply houses.

of twelve montias is less than
$20.00. This is in comparison
ering 300 miles of the Florida
with a $4,000.00 annual income
for the Atlantic- Fishermen's
coast, took a general strike vote
Uruon in Bosthn, Mass., and an
pf all cojnmercial fishermen on
even
greater annual income nn
(Continued from Page 1)
August 12 and tied up the entire
the Pacific coast for fishermen.
This
beef
was
won
primarily because two members of the
fishing fleet in this area on AugThe OPA has been contacted
crew kept exact records of when watches were broken, and
list 17. The Union immediately
in this case but for some un­
turned in the beef to the union with all the necessary informa­
petitioned all buyers for a meet­
known reason they are hot inter­
tion. If all ships' crews would keep a record of sea watches,
ested in the production of fish in
ing to negotiate a contract with,
dates and hours of work performed, our shoreside officials
the Gulf of Mexico even though
would be in a better position td drive through all legitimate
the SIU but only five of the buy-,
Secretary Ickes has asked for
overtime
demands, and our contracts would be enforced 100%.
ers showed up at this meeting.
over seven billion pounds of fish
Give
your union officials better cooperation and you will
They evidently had been sent
this year and has "already. been
receive
every
cent that is due to you under our contracts.
there to get what Information
i
told that it would be impossible
they could for the Florida Fish
for the fishermen to produce over
Exchange which is controlled by
three billion pounds.
the buyers of the state and is one
MORALE HIGH
At the present time there are
of the most anti-union outfits in
over 400 fishing boats tied up and
The morale of the men is bet­
the south.
the Gulf Coast District Fisher­
ter
than it has ever been before
Nothing was accomplished at
men's Union has received letters
(Continued from Page 1)
this meeting and all buyers were and with the financial assistance and wires from ports all the way WASHINGTON, D. C. — A
being given them by the SIU, we
words,
Vincent's ambition is such
wartime
charter
program,
de­
notified by registered mail to at­
from Savannah, Ga., to Browns­
are certain that they will win
that
he
will even sabotage Mac­
vised
by
President
Roosevelt
and
tend another meeting three days
ville, Texas, asking that an or­
this strike.
auley's
plans
for labor if it means
Prime
Minister
Churchill
for
the
later. At this meeting not a single
ganizer be sent in to set up their
a
build-up
for
himself.
purpose
of
bareboating
Ameri­
In the meantime we have an­ locals. We will get to these other
buyer attended and we learned
And
so
for
once, a carefully
can-built
ships
to
Allied
nations
that this was the order of the alyzed the earning capacity of ports as fast as possible, but in
laid
WSA
trap
has been sprung,
having
excess
seamen
as
com­
the net fishermen throughout the the meantime we must realize we
Florida Fish Exchange.
only
to
catch
a
bureaucrat
instead'
Gulf area and learn that the av­ have a tough fight on our hands pared with cargo vessels, was
During all this time the fish­
of
a
worker.
announced today by War Ship­
erage weekly wage over a period which must be won first.
ing fleet was tied up with a loss
ping Administrator Emory S. But we don't consider this any
of fish estimated at 175,000 lbs.
precident. We have no doubt
Land.
U. S. DfEPARTMENT OF LABOR
per day.
that
the swivel chair artists will
The charter implements an
resolve
their own jealousies in
United
States
Conciliation
Service
arrangement made by the Presi­
HOLCOMBE CONCILIATES
the
greater
interest of presenting
dent and Prime Minister Church­
a
united
front
against the main
We immediately petitioned the
^AGREEMENT
ill shortly after Pearl Harbor un­
enemy—^the
American
seamen.
Conciliation Service of the U.S.
der which Great Britain agreed
Department of Labor to send a
It is hereby mutually agreed between the Fish Buyers and to devote the bulk of her build­
conciliator into St. Petersburg Wholesalers of West Florida and the Gulf Coast District Fishermen's ing power to war vessels and the
—iMii ••Ciiiiiii
and see what could be done tow­ Union of the Seafarers International Union that the following terms United States would become the
ard forcing the buyers into a shall prevail on a tentative basis pending the negotiation of a Mas­ merchant shipbuilder for the
meeting. Commissioner Bryce P. ter Agreement between the Fish Buyers and the Fishermen's Union war.
Holcombe was assigned to the as above named:
The following men have lei^
Basic Reasons Listed
case and arrived in St. Peters­
lers, telegrams and packages in
1. The undersigned Fish Buyers and Wholesalers do hereby The announcement included a the . New York hall:
burg on August 22. He immedi­
ately notified the buyers on the recognize the above named Union as the exclusive bargaining copy of a letter addressed by R. Martin Christensen, Earl A.
K^
west coast of Florida that he was agency covering all people who catch and deliver fish products to Admiral Land to Senator Josiah McEwen, R. Dairs, W. E. Warren.
W. Bailey, chairman of the Sen­ Jr., H. Hamilton, M, A. Gonzales,
calling a meeting in the Suwan­ said Buyers and Wholesalers.
ate
Commerce Committee, and Floyd C. Nolan, C. W. Maddox,
nee Hotel that afternoon. This
2.
It
is
further
agreed
that
the
parties
signatory
hereto
will
Representative
Schuyler Otis
meeting was well attended but
W. Shaw, C. Rehkoff, R. Daniels,
upon
due
notice
assemble
and
negotiate
jointly
with
the
aforesaid
Bland,
chairman
of the House C. Hamley, W. J. Iruine, J. J. B.
though some progress was made,
nothing definite could be done Union terms and conditions of the Master Fishermen's Agreement. Committee on Merchant Marine Gehm, A. G. Garth, J. R. Landuntil the buyers from the out­
3. It is mutually agreed that the Buyers and Wholesalers shall and Fisheries, in which he des­ ron„ C. H. Kath, W. Schiller, W.
lying localities showed up.
pay the Fishermen eight cents (8c) peri pound for round grouper cribed the program and said M. Jackson, L. Ladmirault, W«
that the rapidly increasing
Another meeting was held on and seven cents (7c) per pound for round mullet, pending the con­ Uni|jpd States fleet might shortly Szostak, J. F. Rodriguez, J. D.
the 23rd of August with buyers summation of the Master Agreement. Tt is understood, however, "stretch" the resources of the Hawkins, F. Francis, H. Graham,
A. G. Hornsby, W. F. Urp, Char­
•from a majority of the ports out that should fishermen be required to draw grouper, such drawn maritime training program.
les Szakacs, Harry Thomas, Jimon strike and a committee from grouper shall be nine cents (9c) per pound, or one cent (Ic) per
mie Shaw, K. Van Amberg, L.
the SIU fishermen. At this meet­ pound fpr drawing.
Garabedian, J. D. Fitzgerald, R.
ing a tentative agreement was
4. It is, agreed that should either party, the Buyers and Whole­
A. Novak, R. G. Narelle, R. Gra­
reached by the buyers present salers, or the Fishermen's Union, have any dispute over the terms
ham, T. Tallon, - B. Morrow, A.
and the Union which gave the of this Memorandum of Agreement, the Director of the United
S.
S.
ROBIN
SHERWOOD
Graft,
R. M. Snow, R. M. Hill, T.
SIU fishermen the exclusive bar­
States Conciliation Service shall be requested to assign a Commis­ STEWARD DEPT
$29.00
L.
Bowers,
Jr., H. Lynch, F. Hurt,
gaining rights for all fishermen sioner to adjust any such differences.
S.
S.
ROBIN
GREY
26.00
H.
Genzalick,
L. Berwick, E. M,
in that area. It also increased the
J.
TENNANT
18.00
Janke,
R.
C.
Drain, T. Erlund,
price of fish to 8c per pound
5. It is further agreed that upon the signing of this Memoran­
which was the price demanded dum by Buyers and Wholesalers, the members of the Fishermen's S. S. TARALYON BROWN 16.50 George Ruf, Fred England, Ro­
S. S. BLENHEIM
,
14.00 land Rae, Neil Fitzgerald, John
by the union and is to remain in Union shall return to work catching fish without further delay.
S. S. SCHOHARIE
13.00 Ingold, Fred E. Phillip, Perry
effect until a master agreement
DONE
this
24th
day
of
August,
1943,
at
St.
Petersburg,
Florida.
S.
S.
BAYO
CHICO
12.00 Klauber, James Corsa, C. O.
C£m be signed with all the fish
Witnessed
by:
S.
S.
PETER
DONAHUE.
..
11.00
Pairone, R. W. Gavigan, Lester
buyers on the Gulf Coast. This
BRYCE P. HOLCOMBE.
M. D. BIGGS. Vice President 'S. S. ROBIN SHERWOOD.. 11.00 Hoth,.Harry Klieger.
will be done just as soon as the
Commissioner of United
8.00 The following men have checks
Seafarers International Union D. C. ROYALS
' other branches can set up and a
States
Conciliation
Service,
H.
VAUGHN
8.00 in the New York Halh
PAUL
COSSER,
President
nieeting can be called in a cen­
U.
S.
Department
of
Labor
Gulf
Coast
District
Fishermen's
O.^W. Barfield, Jr., Government
tralized port.
TOTAL
Union
$166,50 . Mail, Verle Travis.
A RECORD GAIN
W. T. Pollock, Pollock Fish Co.
This was the biggest gain ever
Harry H. Bell &amp; Son, Per Harry H. Bell
made by Florida fishermen
as
O. L. Her, Iler's Fish Co.
they have always been cut to
3,%c per pound every year when
Robert W. Groth, Flordia Wholesale Meat Cg.
the large catches started coming
Crew of S.S. Able Stearns can INGEBRITSEN: You have 61
Dick Roberts, John's Pass
in.
collect port bonus for Sydney. hours overtime coming from the
Eighteen buyers signed the
Rollins Fish Co., G. N. Rollins
See Captain Respess, Bull Line, Robin Line.
agreement which was negotiated
New York City.
J. E. Bishop, P. L. Rick, St. Petersburg Fish Co.
under the supervision of Commis­
• MCLAUGHLIN: You have 8
sioner Holcombe. A majority of
J. Pantoja has money coming hours overtime coming from the
Robert Ernest, St. Petersburg, Fla.
the fishing boats around St. Pe=
from the Bull Line for the last Robin Line.
Jake's Fish Market
•tersburg started back fishing;
voyage of the Eleanor.
Any members of crews of fol­
iiowever, two buyers in St. Pe­
W. E. Rousseau, Rousseau..Fish Co.
The following crew members lowing vessels at time of
tersburg and buyers in all the
of the SB. Ironclad have bonus should coUect $125 attack bonus
other branches have refused to
Chas. Clymer. St. Petersburg, Fla.
money coming from the Water­ from companies: BenjanUa Lasign this agreement with the reMann
Fish
Co«
H.
T.
Mann.
«•
^
v
man
Line: L. Hall, A. DeFelice, trobe, Robin Gray, Panama City,
suit that over 700 fishermen are
E,
Bright,
J. Lafaso, J. Narovas, Richard Henry Lee, John Daven­
Kstill out on strike. The only fishHibbs Sea Food, Walter M. Hibbs.
; ; ;•
G.
Small,
J.
Naylor, J. McKenna, port, PM Gulf, Kofresi, Jo|ui
^iipien back to work are the ones
and
E.
Talbot.
.
Sevens, Francis Marion.
George
S.
Sermons.
Tarmon
Springs,
Fl».
:
;
whd,were fishing for the eighteen
(Continued from Page 1)

These Men Cash In On
Schoharie Overtime

New U.S. Ships Macauley's Smear
Allocated British Is Exposed

Honor Roll

MONEY DUE

-..Vj

m

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GULF FISHERMEN MAKE FIRST BIG GAINS UNDER SIU BANNER&#13;
WIN CLOSED SHOP AT HIGGINS&#13;
MACAULEY 'MISSED CONVOY' SMEAR OF SIU IS EXPOSED&#13;
THESE MEN CASH IN ON THE SCHOHARIE OVERTIME BEEF&#13;
LOCAL HEARINGS DESIRED BY NEW SHIPPING PANEL&#13;
VOICE IN POST WAR PLANNING ASKED BY MARITIME LABOR&#13;
I.T.F. GAINS NEW AFFILIATE&#13;
ROOSEVELT DECREES SHACKLE LABOR UNIONS&#13;
INTERCOASTAL SHPPING&#13;
HE-HE-RO&#13;
NEW U.S. SHIPS ALLOCATED BRITISH</text>
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                    <text>OFFICIAL ORGAN OP THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
VOL. V.

267

NEW YORK. N. Y., FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 10, 1943

No. 24

WAAMLooks War Prisoners Used By Shipowner
Like Film
To Upset Wages And Conditions
Flam
OWI White No Souvenirs Are Allowed
Says Fuss Budget Wyckoff
Washes WSA

t•

By A. B.
The trip is over, the boys all
What appears to be another
paid off and are hunting for an­
racket at the expense of the mer­
other ship with good CQoks and
chant seamen, blossomed out in
a square captain, so here goes for
War Shipping Administration
New York last week. This latest
a try at the highlights of last trip.
Washington. D. C.
collection of free loaders is en­ That fink herders- delight, the
The most important event of
titled "Women's Auxiliary of the War Shipping Administration, is
September 6, 1943
the trip, and the most dangerous
American Merchant Marine, Inc." in the process of being perfumed Mr. John Hawk, Secretary-Treasurer
as far as our union is concerned,
and its avowed purpose is to col­ and "sold" to the American peo­ Seafarers International Union of North America*
was the skipper's use of war
lect old clothes for the seamen ple. The Office of War Informa­ Room 213, 2 Stone Street
prisoners to break down our con­
and to comfort their wives while tion has taken on the task of por­ New York, N. Y.
ditions. But to start at the be­
they are at sea. The old charity traying one of the most ineffici­ Dear Mr. Hawk:
ginning.
ent, bureaucratic and anti-labor
racket, in other words.
The Enforcement Division of the U. S. Bureau of Customs has Sometime last April, one of the
arms
of the government as a mo­
This time, however, something
called
to my attention what appears to be an unintentional infrac­ South Atlantic's palatial "Liberty
new has been added—fancy uni- del of enlightenment and effici­ tion of Articles 78 and 90 issued by the U. S. War Department re­ Belles" came steaming into the
forips. Last week the New York ency.
port of New York in search of a
garding the possession of captured Axis equipment.
Times ran a picture of Mrs. Ada The OWI released this week 12
crew.
As usual, the dispatcher
It appears that on many merchant vessels returning from
Mae Roll, founder and president single typed pages of publicity
rounded
up a full crew and the
of the WAAMs. She was decked entitled "Merchant Shipping of theaters of war members of the crew have obtained by purchase or good ship crossed the bar headed
out in the official WAAM's mil­ the United States in War Time." barter from inhabitants in those localities, arms, munitions, discard­ for a point in North Africa.
itary uniform, and a face that It purportedly contains the en­ ed helmets, etc., as souvenirs.
Going over the weather was
would hardly bring cheer to a tire "magnificent record" of the
Under the Articles of War mentioned above, all discarded or perfect; enemy opposition was
shipwrecked sailor. She had that WSA and the Maritime Commis­ captured Axis material is the property of the United State and un­
light and so was the food. These
fierce, preditory look of a profes­ sion in meeting the war crisis in authorized possession thereof is a violation of said Articles and such
maritime cooks are sure honeys.
merchant shipping.
sional do-gooder.
material will be confiscated by the Customs and other authorized So far I have eaten Hungarian
Of
the
12
pages
of
superlatives,
Of course, an organization can't
United States law enforcement agencies wherever found.
Goulash, Norwegian Goulash, Po­
be denounced merely because its it is significant that only one
lish • Goulash and at least five
I
am
forwarding
this
information
to
you
in
order
that
you
may
quarter
of
one
page-is
devoted
to
founder wears a high pressure
other varieties. Last trip though
hat and a man-eating expression. the WSA's handling of labor re­ advise the members of your union of the facts herein, for their
when the cook finished
com­
There are sounder reasons for our lations. And yet it is this very guidance.
pounding
a
stew,
and
being
stuck
Very
truly
yours,
suspicions concerning this set-up. point that provides the key *to
for a name, it came on the menu
HUBERT WYCKOFF,
To^ljegin with, the seamen don't the whole record of bimgling. It
as VICTORY GOULASH. It was
Assistant Deputy Administrator
need charity, don't want charity, is the WSA bureaucrats' hatred
lousy,
but did not result in any
for Maritime Labor Relations
and will refuse it if offered to of organized labor, it is their
deaths.
The biggest beef on the
them. Anyone who starts such a determination to impose a gov­
way
over,
was the food.
move is likely to be figuring on ernment fink hall on all coasts,
We
finally
made port, discharg­
In
Memoriam
In
Memoriam
lining their own pockets. Fur­ that has led the bureau into the
ed our cargo and pointed our fair
BROTHER
BROTHER
most
devious
maneuvers
and
the
thermore this outfit has all' the
ship's bow for home. Then they
Edward J. Perritt
earmarks of a phoney. It has most unbusiness like and ineffi­
Joseph R. Gillis
cient
practices.
(Fireman. Oiler. Watertender) slapped a few hundred war pris­
(Able Seaman)
never come near the union to dis­
oners aboard and said "GO".
The WSA record of building
cuss the problems of the seamen,
When the Master saw them com­
Born.
October
14.
1902.
Died
Born
August
8.
1900.
Died
in
it has not even contacted the and sailing ships could have been
ing aboard a big smile lit up his
in
an
accident
in
New
York
Or
an.
North
Africa.
United Seamen's Service. No increased many fold had not the
face, as he thought "My troubles
City on August 30. 1943.
July 17. 1943.
{Continued on.-Page 3)
{Continued on Page 3)
are over. Think of the work that
I can get done this trip, without
paying overtime, and what a rec­
ord I will have with the com­
pany."
In a weekly magazine of na­
When we finally sailed through
tional circulation, Secretary of the nets on the home stretch the
the Interior Harold L. Ickes this prisoners were turned-to, paint­
week gave the inside story of ing the ship down. Those mon­
the long three-cornered contest keys were all over the ship with
between the United Mine Work­ a pot of paint and a brush in
ers, coal operators and govern­ nothing flat^ (just think of that
ment agencies over wage in­ overtime). Every night the Bocreases for coal diggers.
s'un had to hunt the ship down
"Crisis on Coal," Ickles' article to make sure that he had knock­
was called, and in it he made be­ ed them all off. They only used
hind-the-scenes disclosures.
an average of ten a day and they
The document largely sustains were given the liberty of the ship
claims made by labor leaders — without a guard.
many of them bitter critics of
John L. Lewis—that the contro­ The cooks sent out an SOS arid
versy could have been adjusted, shortly after, the cry was heard
if the War Labor Board had not and a couple of them showed up in
{Continued on Page 4)
barred a settlement, except on its
own terms.
Before the article- went to
New Orleans Mailing
press, it passed through the
Address
hands of the Office of War In­
formation and the WLB. Both
All mail for union brothers
agencies demanded drastic
in
New Orleans should be ad­
changes to tone the piece
dressed
in the following man­
down and soft-pedal criticism of
ner:
the board, but Ickes declared the
John Doe
*
proposed revisions came too late
General
Delivery
Death came to these miners before a living wage. 19 members of the United Miiie Workers are to be included.
Seamen's Postal Unit
Ickes said flatly that, contrary
shown being carried out of the Sayreton. Alabama mine of the Republic Steel Company.
Custom House Station
The union has charged that Republic Steel flagrantly ignored many safety laws .in the operation to the WLB's stand, the Miners
New Orleans 16. La.
of **»'« mine—and is directly rei^nslble for the explosion which snuffed out these lives.
{Continued on Psge 4)

WLB DOUBLE CROSSED MINERS—ICKES

I'X.'

,,

,

t •,

Vil

�THE

Pag® Two

S EA FARERS

LOG

Friday. Sepiembor 10, 1943 ^

" "rl;

SEAFAREKS LOG

Oi\

Published by the

^ASHii\GTorv.:

SEAFARERS' INTERNAlldNAt WlOlS
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District

• BV MATT4IEW

Affiliated with the American Pederation of Labor
HARRY LUNDEBERG - 110 Market Strwt,

JOHN HAWK

-

-

-

- - - - "President
Fraaclsco, Calif.

-

-

-

- Secy-Treas.

P. O. 'Box 25, Statidh P., New York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE

-

- - Washington Rep.

424 5 th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
•

•

•

Directory of Branches
BRANCH

PHONE

ADDRESS

NEW YORK (4)
2 Stone St
BOwling Green 9-3437
BOSTON (10)..
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Gay St
Calvert 4539
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St
Lombard 7651
NORFOLK
•
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS (15) ..309 Chartres St
Canal 3936
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St
Savannah 3-1728
TAMPA
423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
MOBILE
.......55 So. Conception St
Dial 2-1392
PUERTO RICO
45 Ponce de Leon
Puerto de Tierra
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-8043
FT LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway. .. Ft. Lauderdale 1601

PUBLICATION OFFICE;
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8346

Twelve Million Jobless Seen
After This War Is Ended
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Under
the best, of circumstances, the
post-war unemployment problem
is certain to be "critical." If ade­
quate steps to deal with it are not
taken in advance, it may be "de­
vastating."
So declares the post-war divis"on of the Bureau of Labor Stat­
istics, which warned that at least
12,000,000 persons may be unem­
ployed six months after the war
ends. At least 7,OOO,OO0 will be
separated from payrolls immedi­
ately after the war ends, it said.
"The problem," the report add­
ed, "must be tackled now, lest
the nation be led to the brink of
another and even more terrible
war."
A six-point program to cushion
the shock was advocated. It calls
for rapid reconversion of indus­
try to peacetime production, a
public works program, financial
assistancie to demobilized soldiers
and war workers, and the volun­
tary withdrawal from labor
iharkets Of wOmen, school-age
y&lt;)uths and over-age employes.
Prediction was made that 1,500,000 workers will be turned
adrift by the aircraft industry
alone, and that the reduction in
shipbuilding may be equally se­
vere. The automobile ^industry,
the report said, is expected to
drop Xroin a wartime peak of
300,000 to 2bO,bb6 and wiU never
climb back higher than 600,000.
The bureau said welders, rivet­
ers, turret lathe operators, ma­
chinists, tool and die makers and
other skilled workers will feel
the impact most "arid will have to
trarisfer to other kinds «5f work.
The outlook of the unskilled
tvorkers was pictured as being
even more desperate and the
board said they haye a hard pe­
riod of readjiistirierit ahead.
"Ramprint Uriempioynidrit," th^
country was told, will cause all!
iorts of social terisibhs hh'd fric-'

tions that may produce social dis­
orders of the gravest nature.
The bureau asserted that the
nation leans on a slender reed
when it places complete reliance
on the unemployment insurance
system to tide workers over the
period of readjustment. It could
not possibly stand the shock, the
report insisted, and that conten­
tion was upheld by Ewan Clague,
director of the bureau of em­
ployment of the Social Security
Board, in a radio broadcast.
"bur present system," Clague
said, "just won't be able to pay
all the benefits to which persons
are entitled if there is as much
unemployment at the end of the
war as is expected."
He pointed out that the reserv­
es are in 49 separate state funds,
while Unerriployrhent will be
largely concentrated in a few
centers. Ue also recalled that
inillions of workers have rio claim
whatever ori these furids, because
they are riot covered by the So­
cial Security system.
Other weak liriks cited by
Clague are thaf payments are too
small arid for too limited periods.
A married mari with a family, he
emphasized, receives no more
thari a single man.

Honoir Roll
S.S. WALTER RANGER ....$18.00
C. KRANNICH
B.OO
O. BELL
"S.OO
S. S. TEXMAR
4.00
S. S. ALCOA SCOUT
4.00
S. S. F. A. WALKER
3.00
D. CAHOON
2.bb
T. CARR
1,50
J. W. STEt&gt;HENS
1.00
J. LAROCQUE
i.bb
J. ROGERS
1.0b
JAMES K. KANE
LOO
TOTAL

.t.$47.50

Here is the continuation of the
story ()f the fight led by Andrew
Furuseth and the A:FL for sea­
men's rights.
1^22
It had been the gefteral opinion
that the idea of a ship subsidy
would never again be broached
in Congress. But the belief was
based on the ccinterition that
there riever would be such a
Congress as is now in session.
Further, never before have the
same tactics been applied. Thir­
teen years ago when the last ef­
fort was made to foist such a
scheme Updn the country, a great
majority of the newspapers were
opposed to it. Those who favor a
ship subsidy now have seen to it
that no stich condition shall in­
terfere with the present bill.
They had the biggest advertisirig
agency in the U. S. placed at the
head of the shipping board.
Through this agency the chair­
man of the shipping board has
free entry into every newspaper,
in the country. It has proved a
most remarkable combination
and the ship subsidy bill is now
for sale to the American public.
Its glories are set forth in the
most brilliant language. The
chairman of the shipping board,
who was selected to make the
sale, is conducting a wide spread
campaign to secure the legisla-:
tion. No sooner had the bill been
introduced than the seamen dis­

covered the menace to thehi in
its provisions.
it would repeal that section of
the seamen's act which guaran­
teed the right of seamen to leave
a ship in a safe harbor. It also
provides for a merchant marine
reserve, which the seamen de­
nounced as a strike breaking
agency.
As a bait for the seamen to be­
come members of this naval re­
serve, they are to be given a re­
tainer of a month's wages. So
many protests about these two
clauses were' made that the chair­
man promised to eliminate them.
He contended, however, that if
this were ddne the seamen should
suppdrt the bill. This they have
refused to do.
Two conferences were held be­
tween the representatives of the
AFL and the chairman of the
shipping board, during which the
later submitted the same plan to
secure the (iodperation of labor
in support of the bill. The
chairman also used ariother ar­
gument to secure the support of
labor. This Was that as soon as
the ship subsidy biU should have
been passed, thousarids of men
riow idle in the ship yards would
be given employment. At' the
sarrie time he said that the ships
owned by the shipping board
were "junk" and ought to be
sunk in the sea. There are a
number of other dangerous pro­
visions in the bill which effect
the taxpayers in the U. S. It is
prdposed to sell to private ship-

THE NIGHTMARE CREW^
A long trip it was from Ihdia's slrand
A payoff,,^ some wine, and iHe sun
With hot kasts from some NMU Pilots
Which by the "head" were hung!
Till 1 ddzed in my iitter weariness
Sleepy with fever arid l^ooze,
Ovdrpb^'ered by fumes from the Pilot
I slumbered in fitful snooze.
Till wild drOairis fibpded tny anxious mind
Ahd I fancied myself on a ship.
Shanghaied through Currans "Job Trust" Hall
With ah NMu
Ye Gods! when I crossed tHfe gari^fv^ay
What strririgO sight triet my gazO,
The phbriiesi Crew that Ship fever krifew
^tobd fhere iri riiy Sigiit arrayed.
FOr thfe Rbsiih's triaffe was Curfan
Still Veiling—"A ^eCbhd Frbnt!'.'
McKehzie was fhfere fes fen oiler
With Stein the irieSSphrik rhnt!
Myfers .was fhfe Able Sfefeirifeti
With "Finky" Sniifh fes thfe
Dare mfen §0 to sfea ^ith Such a trierifegfe?
"Twas one for thfe Hfefbfes' Rbok.
Thfeir sfe'^agbirig ^efer tv'fes a tirbwdfer Speech
Arid a Sriiii^e ;frbih, ShySte'r Riil;
They had Marltitnfe Laws with iridfexfed ilSws
dh theSe I gazfed ^ iiii!
The jiicturfe of Currah hurig fever the buriks,
Aribthfer, in irifessrbbihs
Whiife a greasy dfeck bf phbhy hiferkfed cards
Were there tor tHfe gferiiblers tfeb.
I wfekerifed in frigiii fetid swferfe by the Gbds
Wb iribfe wbtild 1 siyiggie thfe wirie,
'''^ivfeS bUt a drfeahi. Bill;!{ it wferfe friife
*1^ jiiffe ^ish't ^I'th fe ihih dime!
%'br I ihiiik 'ibb ktiicih Hi thiis Rfettferfed frfehife
To face the sea with such crew—
The Comniunist cash register "searneri"
Who's checkoff the NMU.
—^ap-Ati'-Lift.

PiiWAQfLffi

owners, ships that cost $200 id
$250 per ton to build, for anyn
thing that can be obtainfed. "These
ships may be Sold for $20 per ton
or less.
The purchasers can borrow,
from the shipping board twothirds of the purchase price, and
sufficient money to amortize them
at 2% interest. All to be payable
within fifteen years. During this
period the purchasers can oper­
ate the vessels. They will depre­
ciate as much as 75%. At the end
of fifteen
years the purchasers
can tie them up at some dock
and say to the shippirig board,
"You keep thdm for what we owe
you."
This bill is being widely mis­
represented as a measure inteiuied for the necessary mairitenanco
and upbuilding of the American"
merchant marine. The facts are
that its enactment into law will
bring about conditions under
which all managers and operafors of ships must regard politiiis
as the prime factor in their buslriess, and efficient management
as a secondary consideration of
comparatively little importance.
The AFL*-hereby condemns the
said ship subsidy bill as inimical
to the public interest, and partic­
ularly destructive to the nation's
hopes and aspirations for sea
power.
1923
The greatest blow to the priv­
ileged few was the defeat of the
ship subsidy bill. The arguments
in favor of the ship subsidy bill
were all such flagrant misrepreseritations that the number of
opponents continued to grow Un­
til the members of the Senate
were convinced that they would
mean political suicide if theiy
vcited for such a measure. Ah
outstanding fact in regard-to the
opposition to the bill was that
labor was the only bfgartizatioh
that openly fought against its
passage. It can be said without
fear of contraction that had it riot
been for the AFL and its affili­
ated organizations this pernicious
legisiation would have been driv­
en thrbrigh Cdrigreb tinder the
wiiip arid spur of paffy regular­
ity fend the fefer bf loSs of patron-

rige..

~

The AFL wishes to fcali atten­
tion to the UridiSpUted historical
fact thfet sea power, the ability
to stKicesSfully compfete Or fijght
at "sea, dcpcrids upbri the tj^e,
criferacter and ability Of the riatibri's sefemen. Ships, guhs, tbpls,
etc;, fere fell important, but the
essential requirement fbr-success
is loyal arid (Competent sefemen.
History teaches Us that ilatibns
refusing to recognize this truth
have slbivly but inevitably Ibst
power arid coritrol of the sea.
America's policy for success upon
trie sea lias been clearly defined
"in the seameri's act Of 1915. Sym­
pathetic enforcement of the law
will bririg greater results than
trie trarisfer of billions Of dollars
frdm the U, S. TreasUrj' to the
private feccbUnts of the Shipown­
ers. Ship subsidies are like
crutches —• they lessen iriitlative
and create a spirit of dependence.
A mari Or an mdustry deperident
Upon criitcries ultim.ately be­
comes a slave to trie habit, i.e.,
the cflitciies.

�&gt;•

to. il43

THk ^EXFARERS LOG

Pago Tfaroii ^

JjlOJfL JM,
NEW YORK
On my desk at present are
three requests from ship's crews
tp have the Steward removed,
jThe Pickens of the South Atlan­
tic Line has an NMU man who
got aboard without clearing thru
our Halh This man will be taken
off. The Stewed of the Dunbar
is strictly k.G. He will be taken
'dflE. The crew of the'Alcoa Point­
er is in the meeting tonight arid
' we will hear about him later in
the meeting. Just about every
other ship that comes into this
port has a large number of beefs
against the Steward and they
usually want him suspended for
90 years.
Food is controlled. The stew­
ard cannot order what he wants
like he did in peace time. Ships
are stored upon the basis of so
many ounces of each item of
food per man and the Steward is
required to see that every one
has eriough to eat and that the
food lasts for the entire voyage.
If he is a good guy and gives
ihe crew everything they ask for,
he runs short of several items be­
fore the trip is over and the crew
Says that he doesn't know his

Business rind thrit "he hkd no rfght
to take a steward's job. If he
tries to spread the food out even­
ly frir the whole trip, he is called
a belly-robber. In either case, an
angry crew demarids that actiori
be taken against him.
Given a Liberty ship which was
built to carry a crew of about 40
men, he finds himself with a
green galley crew and first trip
messmen and is expected to take
care of 300 prisoners, 118 armed
guard, 26 gun crew, an indefinite
number of passengers and the
regular crew of about 40 men.
By the time the trip is over, he
is a perfect, subject for a psycho­
pathic ward, and the crew wants
to fire him out of his union. O.K.
boys. Go ahead and give them
all 99 years but don't forget that
everytime you do, you are. get­
ting. rid of an experienced man
and a union brother and replac­
ing him with either an NMU or
a RMO main arid see how you like
them. Think it "oyer, fellows, be­
fore you raise Hell with your
next steward and remember that
one-third of our membership are
steward's Department men.
JOE VOLPIAN, Patrolman

Out of the Focil
by

3C..
We viSited the Food Trade Vocatidrial School at 208 W. 13th St.,
due to the insistence of Tdnf Schiavone and Shakey Moore, who
were sore that more SIU men didn't take advantage of the oppor­
tunity.
We met Mr. Citriano who is in charge of the school. He inform­
ed us that the school was the property of New York, and was sub­
sidized by the USMC fdr the purpose of having better cooks,and
bakers about American ships. All seamen who have made one trip
to sea are eligible to enter the school and take the four week course
cooking, butchering, baking and steward work. The governinerit
pays the trainees $6 per diem. The facilities in the school are first
rate and the men teachers there kriow their business. If the trainee
is arixious to learri Ke can be taught the most modern and easiest
methods in handling his first or second cooks' job. Even some of
the old timers would be surprised if they entered the school, and
would find but that there was somethifig iriore they cdiild lerirri.

.

Some of the Brothers may have heard that it was an NMU
project. Nothing Of the sort. The NMU offered the USMC a room
in their building, arid with their usuril ballyhoo iriade it Ibdk as tHe
i)r6ject belonged to them. At first the boys had to go to the NMU
Ho collect their pay, but the cdmplaint of Brother Gomez quickly
tihariged thrit, and they are libW being paid off at the school. The
school has a ^eat rilariy of the NMU sweater girls there, but that
shouldn't stop an SIU man from triking the courSe, if he really wants
to learn. The schdol is riot interested iri your uriion riffiliatioris, riil
it wants to do is make you a better cook arid baker.
I'his school is riot being riin by the RMO, and you're riot a
Sheepshead Bay ritiff by attending it. There rife no Uniforms to Werir
while there except a white ripron.
When you've finished the
course you rire riot obliged to Sail for the WSA, Afiriy Transport
Service or any other fink outfit. If you are interested iri attending
the school, you can get further iriformation at 39 Broadway, ROom
No. 300. See Lieut. Welsh.

KEEP CLEAR WtTH YOUR DRAFT BOARD
By obsrirving thfe fttllriwiiig siriiple iristructioiis you will
continue to receive defeftuent frorii iriilitary seiwice. Fail
tb dbSrihre these fiiles kiid yoU may wind up in the army.
WjttEH klGOTi'jG dN: Give the clerk or skipper all the
ihfbrmatitfn n^eessriry to fill out RMO Card No. 47 (Green
Carfi),
WKriEN sm
OFT: See that Ckfd No. 48-A Is j^rbjhp^rly filled out by skipper or clerk.
Shli&gt; but beftite yoiir Ullbtttia time riu^bfe has e^ifed.
If you have hot yet flllefi ottt the Grfien Cai^a, eohiact ydur
draft board
let
kfiow that |ybU are saiiirig.

Washes WSA

pJdL&amp;A,—

PROiPIlTEERS AND THE CX)ST OF LIVING ^

Organized labor has repeatedly ing the "gravy train," which cdri-s
charged
that profiteers are almost trasts with their position in 1932,
{Continued from Page 1)
solely
responsible
for high liv­ when about 20 per cent actually
yard stick (does-it-help-smash-la­
ing
costs,
and
has
insisted that, lost money.
i
bor) been applied at every turn.
if
it
wished
to
do
so,
the
admin­
From the outset, it may be
It is no -vVonder that the OWI
only devotes one quarter of a istration could redeem its pledge noted, wholesalers have been the
page to the question of labor re­ to roll .back prices simply by petted darlings of the O.P.A. Un­
lations. They would be hard squeezing out extortionate profits. der the boisterous and blunder­
pressed to -write more than that These claims have been sup­ ing Leon Henderson, they were
without openly falsifying the rec­ ported up to the hilt by the Of­ permitted to write their owni
ord. As it was they came close to fice of Price Administration, but, ticket, mainly because their o-wii
for reasons that are left to the representatives had been in­
doing exactly that.
imagination, the sensational facts trenched in key positions in the
"The War Shipping Adminis­
have not been disclosed to the agency.
tration has issued Statements of
public.
When Henderson established
Policy with all maritime labor
Expert of the O.P.A. have de­ price ceilings, back in 1942, the
organizations," says the public­
termined that wholesale food prices of wholesalers were 20 pel*
ity release. "These in effect re­
dealers increased their profits be­ cent out of line with those of re­
tain the union hiring halls arid
tween 1939 and 1942 as high as tailers. This meant, of course,
the procedures of collective bar­
500
per cent. This startling in­ that it was the retailer -who was
gaining."
formation is contained in Volume to be squeezed when he had tq
The implication here is that 6 of the O.P.A. series of "War
the WSA voluntarily accented Profits Studies," which are not replenish his stocks.
the "Statement of Policy" "and public documents, but are intend­ Instead of rolling back whole­
has since observed it in all good ed only for use of the agency's sale prices, the O.P.A. permitted
retailers to hoist their ceilings,
faith. The seamen know that this officials.
is a lie—whether or not the OWI The facts and figures in this and that is the explanation of an
is aware of it. The "Statement of study are not 'only a blistering increase of almost 50 per cent iri
Policy" was -wrung from the indictment of war profiteers, but the' prices of food paid by con­
WSA by determined unions. are equally an indictment of of­ sumers.
Since having grudgingly signed ficials who have permitted them
The O.P.A.'s confidential report
this Stalemerit, the WSA has at­ to get "away with murder."
shows conclusively that had the
tempted to circumvent it or, Here, boiled down for quick O.P.A. forced wholesalers to
when they felt strong enough, to reading, is what the O.P.A. has make a 20 per cent price reduc­
Operily sabotage it.
discovered but has kept secret: tion, their profits would still have
All the OWI propaganda ma­ Three out of every 10 food been larger than anybody should
chinery can not alter these facts. wholesalers reported profits for be perimitted to take in -war or:
In an explanitory letter accom­ 1942 more than 300 per cent high­ peace time.
panying the publicity released, er than in 1939, and for half of
Another point that may be
the OWI remarks that the "re­ these concerns profits rose 500 worth mentioning is that, while
port" is designed to meet the per cent or more.
the O.P.A. remained silent about
needs of "editors, writers, com­ Seven out of every 10 food the extortion of food wholesalers.
mentators, broadcasters, program middlemen more than doubled It passed out to the press garbled
planners, photographers, and their profits, and four of these figures purporting to show that
others concerried with presenting seven had at least a 200 per cent workers were the real profiteers.
the news." We have no doubt rise.
—LABOKi
but that 90% of the editors, Evenmore startling is the
commentators, etc., will present O.P.A. disclosure that in many
the "news" just as received from instances higher profits were har­
the OWI. The orily place in vested ori a declining volume of
which the real facts have an op­ business. In almost every case,
portunity to be heard now days is profits increased much more rap­ Crew of last trip of S. S. Orein the only free press left in the idly than sales, making it as liiar have $125 attack bonus com­
ing. Collect Calmar Line, Nevr
country—^the labor press.
plain as a pikestaff that whole­ York City.
salers took advantage of the em­
ergency and the complaisance of
Crew of last trip of S. S. Benj.
O.P.A. to jack up prices.
Bourn can collect 12 hours over­
"Wholesale food grocers," the time from Mississippi Line's Nevr
confidential report says, "realized York office.
twice as much on every dollar of
sales in 1942 as in 1939. Sales Crew of last trip of S. S. Johri
were up 43 per cent, but profits P. Poe have extra day area bonus
rose over 200 per cent. The larger coming. Collect at nearest Bull
companies showed the greater in­ Line Office.
•
creases
in
sales,
but
the
smaller
Crew
of
S.S.
Able
Stearns
can
{Continued from Page 1)
concerns
reported
the
greater
in­
collect
port
bonus
for
Sydney.
sponsors of the movement have
See Captain Respess, Bull Line.
been made public, nor have the crease in profits."
That
paragraph
tells
the
real
New York City.
requirements for memberships.
story
of
what
has
happened
to
No specific program is enunci­
wages and the cost of living. J. Panfoja has money cOr
ated. All we know is that officeSj
With
fbbd taking about half of from the Bull Line for the I
have been opened .at 152 West
the worker's -weekly wages, these voyage of the Eleanor.
42nd Street, and that radio time
figures lay the most serious in­
The following crew members
has been contracted for. No
dictment of war profiteering at of the S.S. Ironclad have bonus
doubt the next WAAM move will
the door of food middlemen, who money coming from the Water­
be to lower the boom on the
beat down the farmers at one end man Line: L. Hall, A. DeFelice.
suckers.
and rob consumers at the other. E. Bright, J. Lafaso, J. Narbvak.
All union men should warn;
Declaring that in the past four G. Small, J. Naylor, J. McKenna.
their wives and girl friends (and
years the wholesale grocery busi­ and E. Talbot.
any "live ones") to keep a Weath­
ness has been transformed from
er eye out for this V/AAM Aim
INGEBRITSEN: You have 61
a "marginal to a profitable in­
fiam.
hours
overtime coming from the
dustry," the report declares that
wholesale grocers are earning an Robin Line.
average of 25 to 50 per cent on MCLAUGHLIN: You have 6
invested capital.
hours bveftiriie coming from thri
Today all wholesalers are rid­ Rbbiri Line.

MONEY DUE

WAAMLooks
Like
Flam

Ernest Linne Palmer
Sam L. Barclift
Marshal J. Gieleek
S. JosepHsbri

Keep In i'diich With
Your Local Draft Board,

ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
WEEK OF AUG. 23 TO 28 INCLUSIVE
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL
SHIPPED

336

291

255

882

REGISTERED

233

208

139

580

�Page Four

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. September 10. 1943

War Prisoners Used By Shipowner New Sub Menace
Hinted By Knos

are willing to place their lives in
jeopardy, in addition to torpe­
WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 —The
does, bombs and mines?
airplane won this summer's Al­
Boys, if the next ship you join
lied battle against' submarines,
they say it is for a one-way pas­
and as a result German U-boats
sage, it is nothing serious, it just
apparently are being equipped
means that you will take the ship WASHINGTON-— The Mari Edgar E. Clark, who served as with xiiofe anti-alrcfafl weapons
to North Africa and walk home time Commission has announced president of the Order of Railway preliminary to a new challenge
to collect transportation—if you that 13 Liberty ships scheduled Conductors of America and was for control of the Atlantic seaarrive within ten days of the pay­ for launching in the near future later appointed to the Interstate lanes.
A barber shop was duly open­ off at the original port of en will be named for former labor Commerce Commission by Presi­
This appraisal of the enemy's
ed with great pomp and cere­ gagement. The prisoners wil leaders. Labor Day ceremonies dent Theodore Roosevelt.
intentions
was given today by
mony just outside of the chill work their way back.
in various shipyards featured Further illustrious names in la­
boxes and convenient enough to All these beefs were taken up teunchings and the laying of bor history to be assigned are: Secretary of the Navy Knox and
the meat chopping block that it with the Naval Intelligence in keels of some of the vessels.
John I. Nolan, international vice- was supplemented by figures re­
was nearly always covered with Norfolk. So far, we have heard The roster includes such not­ president of Iron Moulder's Union leased by the naval high com­
hair. But what's a little hair in of no action being taken though ables as Heywood Broun, mem­ and former Congressman - from mand.
the grub, after all meat is ration­
ber of the CIO and first head of California; Ben T. Osborne, exe­ The great part played by the
ed. (Price—^two packs of Luck- Thing it over well, boys. It is the American Newspaper Guild; cutive secretary of Oregon Fed­ airplane in the anti-submarine
ies; Proprietor — one prisoner of your Union and these are your Joshua A. Leach, founder and eration of Labor; Michael Casey, campaign's success was disclosed
conditions, that are being sold
war).
first president of the Brother­ president of Interhatiohal Team­ in the naval report summarizing
down the river.
hood
of Locomotive Firemen and sters, Chauffeurs and Warehouse­ operations during May, June and
The. Engineers were not to be
Enginemen;
Robert Fechncr, who men; Albert J. Berres, of the July. During this period the Al­
outdone in building up their rep­
served
for
years
as a representa­ Metal Trades of AFL; George lies sank 90 U-boats and pretty
utation. Their cry for help was
tive of the American Federation Uhler, president of Marino En­ well scotched, at least for the
answered and several prisoners
of Labor and was first director of gineers Beneficial Association, time being, the threats to theii;
were detailed to the engine room.
the Civilian Conservation Corps; CIO; Arthur M. Huddell, presi­ trans-Atlantic supply routes.
One of the wipers was promoted
to Engine Room. Bos'un (Same Members of the crew of S. S. and William B. Wilson, Secretary dent of International Union of
The Navy said American forces
Pay) and put in full charge. Malt W. Hanson should contact of Labor in President Woodrow Operating Engineers.
alone
sank at least 29 enemy sub­
Labor leaders for whom Lib­
Needless to say, no military Richard M. Cantor. 51 Chambers Wilson's cabinet.
marines
in those three months.
Other names of distinction on erty ships were named in cere­
guard was put in the Engine St.. New York City.
Of
these,
26 were destroyed by /
the list are: Jerome K. Jones, monies held Labor Day, 1942,
Room while these men were
JOHN WAZALIS
airplanes had
AFL leader in Atlanta, Georgia; were: Samuel Gomner-s, Andrew'
working. However, the wiper
Your book is at headquarters Patrick Henry Morrissey, one Furuselh, Peter J. McGiiire,
&lt;"&gt;=
Was instructed to keep a sharp
office. Your clothes are at the time grand master of the Broth­ James Duncan, John Mitchell of the three bagged by naval sur-.
tvatch on their behavior in case
face forces.
New York Customs. Pier 61.
erhood of Railroad Trainmen; and John W. Brown.
ithey reverted to Fascism, and to
Knox told a press conference
take appropriate action if a move
JOHN E. DaROCHA
AFL
Denounces
that
there is reason to believe
Ickes
Reveals
was made to take over the ship: Get in touch with your draft
that
the
Germans are calling in
Labor Conscription
War Labor Board
(The brave wiper).
board in Savannah.
their
U-boats
to put anti-aircraft
• I wonder if the soldiers who JOHN SOLOMON WIGFIELD Double Cross of U.M.W. Moves By Brass Hats
guns on them and he was empha­
captured these prisoners did so Your union book and Coast
"Brass hats" in Buffalo were tic that the battle of the Atlantic
with the idea of undermining
{Continued from Page 1)
has not been ended.
Guard Pass are at headquarters deserved
wage increases and, in accused this week by Frank FenAmerican labor standards?
office in New York.
I'act, they would have been jus­ ton, A. F. of L. organization di­ "It's as sure as sunrise that
; I wonder if when a Company
tified in abrogating their two- rector, of putting over a scheme they will be back in there again,"
guaiantees us safe working con­
year
contract after Pearl Harbor of labor control that is an enter­ he, said. "There is no reason to Keep In Touch With
ditions, they are sincere?
and demanding pay boosts then ing wedge for a plan to conscript believe that we have disposed of
I wonder if American seamen Your Local Draft Board.
workers for private bosses.
the submarine menace."
and there.
They would have been granted, The plan was authorized, he Knox replied affirmatively
too, he said, because then there said, by Mrs. Anna Rosenberg, when asked if small aircraft car­
were no wage freezing regula­ New York state director of the riers have not largely met the
tions. But the union conscient- War Manpower Commission, in need for air "protection in Middle
oiisly stuck to the terms of the violation of policies laid down by Atlantic areas beyond the effec­
contract and did not press for the labor - management policy tive patrol range of land-based
wage rate amendn^ents until ex­ committee of the national com­ aircraft.
Central Registering and Dispatching Office
mission.
piration of the pact.
\
OPERATORS
Open in SUP Headquarters at San Francisco
Mrs. itosenberg is known to be
"SHADOWED-BOXED"
close to the White House and has Bakke Made Co-chairman
During
the
long
negotiations
For SIU Members and T, C*8 in
the President's ear, but has been Of War Shipping Panel
that started in March, the oper­ the center of frequent heated
Deck, Engine and Steward Departments
ators ..only .."shadow-boxed" ..as controversies.
The National War Labor Board '
far as bargaining i^ concerned, She has held jobs with various has announced the appointment
Increased shipping on West Coast by SIU members
Ickes asserted.
Federal agencies, and one of the of E. Wight Bakke, professor of
has made it necessary to open a separate and complete
"Certain gentlemen were firm bitterest outbursts against her economics at Yale University, as
business office to be devoted solely to registering and carin the intention there would be occurred when it was found' she co-chairfnan of the WLB 'Wat;
^g for the needs of SIU members in all departments.
no settlement with the Miners," held a lucrative 'position with Shipping Panel.
he said. "They said 'no' to all Macy's in New York while draw­ Professor Bakke has acted as
All SIU members in San Francisco are required to im­
suggestions, finally throwing the ing government salaries. As a public member of many WLB
mediately register in SIU office at 59 Clay St. SIU members
dispute into the lap of the War result of the attacks, she gave up panels, and has also served as a
in SUP Branches on the West Coast are to register in the
Labor Board, toward which an the private job.
respective SUP Office and I'eceive an SIU shipping card.
board referee in several cases
influential group had been work­ Fenton, who is a member of the during the past year.
SIU shipping cards will have preference on SIU ships and
ing from the outset."
will be recognized by all SUP Dispatchers. SIU Deck mem­
national committee, inslructed
At a critical stage in the con­ A. F. of L. unions in Buffalo to
bers will have second preference when SUP rneniber's are
In Memoriam
troversy, just before midnight. disregard the scheme and declar­
available.
May 31, Ickes said he called in ed he would demand that the
BROTHER
Lewis and Charles O'Neill, commission order Mrs. Rosenberg
For Further Information:
William Cantrell
spokesmen for the Northern op­ to abandon or alter it.
(O. S.)
Call your union offices and tanker organizers at the
erators, and proposed a tempor­
addresses listed below. You will always finds somebody at
Born Sept. 25. 1911. Died in
TIED TO JOBS
ary contract.
these numbers excepting at night.
Gran, North Africa,
This would have provided ap­
Under the Buffalo program,
July 17. 1943.
proximately a dollar-a-day in­ which is the most sweeping in
SEATTLE, WASH.—86 Seneca St.—Phone Elliott 6752.
crease to the workers, a.s part
—^E. Coeistei or Johnson.
the country, a curb is placed on regulations are put Into effect,
payment on the union's claim for
the free movement of aU male but in Buffalo labor's opposition
PORTLAND. OREGON—111 West Burnside St.—Phone
"portal-to-portal" pay,' covering
workers in the area. No such was overridden, he declared. Lo­
Beacon 4336—John Massey or C. Atkins.
travel time spent underground.
worker can take a job, nor can a cal labor chiefs have branded the
The full amount would, mean­
RICHMOND, CALIFORNIA—257 Fifth St.—Phone Rich­
boss employ him, unless approv­ present setup a "labor servitude
while, be determined by an im­ ed by a committee of arniy and
mond 4021—Louie Glebe or Banks.
plan."
partial
commission.
VANCOUVER, B. C.—340 B. Cambie St.—Phonp Pacific
navy agents.
THE ENTERING WEDGE
DISPUTE
NEAR
SETTLEMENT
7824—Hugh Murphy.
"If compulsion is clamped dowrt
Both sides indicated the com­ "These military men have been
WILMINGTON, California ^ 440 Avalon Blvd. —Phone
promise would be acceptable, telling workers they have to quit on labor in Buffalo, attempts will
4449.
Ickes decliu'ed, adding: "I believ­ jobs they hold and take new be made to extend it elsewhere,'/
ed the dispute might be settled ones, in specified plants, regard­ Fention said. "So far, at least, we
NEW YORK Cmr — 105 Broad St. — Phone BOwling
less of the wages paid," Fenton have no 'draft labor' law iii thil
within 24 hours."
Green 9-^530—^Morris Weisberger.
said.
country, and we won't tolerate
However, the WLB threw a
SAN FRANCISCO-59 Clay St.—Phone Exbrook 8229—
In other communities, labor- efforts to put into effect the esr
"monkey wrench." It ordered
Phil Conley.
the Miners and operators to • stop management committees must be sence of such a law by round-;
consulted before any manpower about methods."
, ,
negotiations.

{Continued from Page 1)
the galley and were busy prepar• ing a mess of the Italian national
dish for the crew. They came to
stay, and stay they did for the
whole trip. They did not confine
themselves to their own food, but
were doing a lot for the cooks in
preparing the crews' stew pot.

13 Labor Leaders Honored
At Liberty Ship Launching

SIU And Tanker Members
On West Coast

•p
11'i

•X-

&gt;- . •,

''f.\

•I'v/.i

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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
WAAM LOOKS LIKE FLIM FLAM&#13;
WAR PRISONERS USED BY SHIPOWNERS TO UPSET WAGES AND CONDITIONS&#13;
OWI WHITE WASHES WSA&#13;
NO SOUVENIRS ARE ALLOWED SAYS FUSS BUDGET WYCKOFF&#13;
WLB DOUBLE CROSSED MINERS--ICKES&#13;
TWELVE MILLION JOBLESS SEEN AFTER THIS WAR IS ENDED&#13;
THE NIGHTMARE CREW&#13;
PROFITEERS AND THE COST OF LIVING&#13;
13 LABOR LEADERS HONORED AT LIBERTY SHIP LAUNCHING&#13;
NEW SUB MENACE HINTED BY KNOX&#13;
AFL DENOUNCES LABOR CONSCRIPTION MOVES BY BRASS HATS&#13;
BAKKE MADE CO-CHAIRMAN OF WAR SHIPPING PANEL&#13;
SIU AND TANKER MEMBERS ON WEST COAST</text>
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                    <text>RAKERS JOQ
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA

VOL. V.

NEW YORK. N. Y., FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 17. 1943

UT

No. 25

$15 Boost Won For 'New England'
Men; 5 Cent Off-line Work Increase
Climaxing a full year of struggle with the New England Steamship Company, shipowner stooges and phoney War Labor
Board Referees, the union won this week a monthly boost of $15 for all ratings on the New England ships, and an increase in off
line service work of 5 cents per hour. This victory was established on September 10 when the Boston Regional WLB handed down
a confirmation of a maritime panel report containing these gains. Not only will the $15 increase go far toward eliminating the
Wage differential between New England jobs and similar work along the coast, but the union won a retroactive clause which
*means that every man will*;directly with the owner. Al­
receive the increase as of De^ though New England wages were
cember 9, 1042. This means patently "sub-standard," the ship­
HERE ARE
HIGHLIGHTS OF
NEW ENGLAND
BEEF AS
PRINTED IN
THE LOG
OVER THE
• PAST FEW
MONTHS.
THE TWELVE
MONTp OLD
FIGHT WAS

District WLB Upholds Phoney
Decision On New Eni
The Bojton Regional War Ub.
c.nerated hy ththe I

'141

FINALLY
WON THIS
WEEK
WITH. PAY
BOOSTS FOR
1
ALL.

k-vWCYSO

SE-J

Strike
1..W

Labor Board Set Straight
I On *New, England' Provocations

Screws Tightened
On Labor Control
Federal agencies this week
turned the screws tighter on con­
trol of manpower, ordering a
System of "rationing" of labor for
the entire West Coast.
James F. Brynes, director of
the Office of War Mobilization,
announced the plan and revealed
it goes further than any of the
"employment stabilization" pro­
grams now in effect in industrial
areas.
Under the setup, labor will
have less freedom to pick and
choose jobs, and will be under
pressure to go where directed by
manpower officials.
Also, West Coast industries
will be given priority ratings.
Those with top priority will get
"first crack" at available workers.
Those'at the bottom of the list
will get little or none.
CART BEFORE H6RSE
Propaganda campaigns will be
started to attract more workers to
the Coast, and if not enough are
obtained contracts to some war
plants will be cancelled and the
work shifted elsewhere. Workers
left behind will be induced to go
into other war factories.
• A. F. of L. leaders contended
. - {Continued on Page 4)

: the txxi reported In detail the plot of the New England line to foment a
J ciws and thui ieopardize our case before the Regional War Labor
t from aH indicatioiif the shipowner completely failed to real: part of t)tc Union
the men back to woHi
^ud prcvcDtad any catlendad tl*up of the ships. The oreaa
taiir faUertDed aa to the sUtai
of their beef befe^ tho WtM
ahdaatotheahlpovni
9 cmttng a etrl
•. the W atory of tha
t waa fpcead bp
1 aiembeia «t
r Boiud.
a Darttk
" UWar

well over $100 in the pocket
of every New England man
at once. Any man who either
quit or was discharged since
the retroactive date, shall re­
ceive the amount of the in­
crease up to the time he left
the employ of the Company.
These men mus£ mail their
written application for re­
troactive pay to the Com­
pany within 60 days.
The Regional War Labor Board
failed to grant the men all that
was asked by the union, but un­
der the circumstances the decis­
ion is acceptable.
The history of this case is long
and stormy, with the shipowner,
and his allies using every legal
and illegal dodge in the books in
order to escape paying the men
a living wage. It was in the fall
of 1942 that the union first at­
tempted to negotiate an increase

NMU AND "STABILIZATION

99

AN EDITORIAL
The National Maritime Union is now phenalia used by the Stalinists to smother
negotiating a new contract with the the class struggle, can not bring improv­
shipowners. The NMU's /demand is for ed working conditions to the workers—
"stabilization." This word — stabiliza­ and the rank and file members of the
tion— sounds good. It sounds as if it NMU are now beginning to understand
. were on the side of law and order and this.
motherhood and the eternal verities.
It is because of this awakening on the
Anyone who would be against stabiliza­ part of the NMU rank and file that the
tion must, of course, be a disrupter. And (.leadership must now make desperate
disrupters "do Hitler's work."
moves to bring their contracts up to the
level
of those held by the SIU. But even
Stripped of all these fancy implica­
tions, stabilization means to the NMU now they don't turn to real trade union
the granting of wages and conditions struggle to achieve their ends, they don't
threaten the shipowners with the eco­
comparable to those won by the SIU.
nomic power of their union—rather do
This may come as a shock to some they phenagle with their fellow-travelers
NMU rank and filers who swallowed the through the back doors of Washington in
Stalinist propaganda designed to convince the hope of winning by bureaucratic
them that they enjoyed the best condi­ ukase that which they failed to earn
tions on the waterfront. The cold facts through unionism.
are—the NMU has never had wages and
conditions comparable to those of the
And, of course, this betrayal of the
SIU. And there is a reason for this.
members is dressed up by the leaders in
In the final analysis, wages are won by Red, White and Blue. Vice President
Myers says in the current issue of The
the strength of picket lines. There is no
substitute for this weappn when dealing Piloty "The NMU's struggle for a stab­
with the bosses. Labor - Management ilized national agreement is part of a
Committees, stabilization conferences, larger fight which is already in progress
unity moves, and all the rest of the para-

{Continued from Page 2)

-.

owner hid behind the "Little
Steel Formula" and refused to
make any concessions.
On December 9, 1942, the case
was certified to the War Labor
Board and A new series of run
arounds began. WLB Referee
Coit heard the union case, and
ruled against us on every point.
His ruling was then upheld by
the Boston Regional Board. Goit's
ruling, and his logic, so outraged
the facts presented by the union,
the case was immediately ap­
pealed to the National War La­
bor Board in Washington. Full
proof that the Referee handed
down a phoney decision was the
fact that the National War Labor
Board directed the Boston Re­
gional Board to reconsider the
case.
It was on July 23 that the
Union appeared before a mari­
time panel appointed by the Re­
gional Board, and once again
submitted briefs which contained
overwhelming evidence of the "
substandard nature of the New
England wage scales. No sooner
had this panel hearing adjourned
than shipowner stooges went to
work on the New England boats
and within 24 hours had foment­
ed a strike. This was done to
jeopardize the SIU case before
the panel.
Prompt action by the union
got the ships sailing and placed
the blame for the stoppage di­
rectly where it belonged—on the
shipowner. On August 2 the
Panel decision was handed down,
and on Sept. 10 this decision was
confirmed by the Regional Board.
We reprint the panel's full re­
port and recommendations, all of
which become binding (unless
appealed by the shipowner)
within 14 days.
NATIONAL
WAR LABOR BOARD
REGION I
August 2, 1943
In the Matter of:
New England Steamship Co.
and
Seafarers International'
Union of North America, AFL
Case No. 3946-CS-D
PANEL REPORT AND
RECOMMENDATIONS
THE COMPANY
The New England Steamship
Company is a subsidiary of the
New York, New Haven and Hart­
ford Railroad Company. It is en{Continued on Page 3)

�Friday, Sepletnber 17, 1943 ]

' Page Two

•.i

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

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

HARRY LUNDEBERG

------ President

110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

------- Secy-Treas.

P. O. Box 25, Station P., New York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Rep,
424 5 th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
•

•

y

• (Continued from Page 1)

in our country. Certain employer inter­
ests and craft officials in various indus-""
tries are now moving to scuttle the war
effort and the labor movement at the
same time."
Myers' tortured logic attempts to show
an Hentity between the war effort and
his demand for SIU wages and condi­
tions. One who is against the latter must
be against the former—simple as that.
Our prediction is that the NMU lead­
ers are not going to get their stabilization
agreement. In spite of their manifold

^ i..'ia

services to the shipowners, they are noig
going to be able to cash in — the cop
never has respect for his stool and kicl^
him in the teeth every time he whines
for more dough.
'Nor will the NMU win wages and
conditions comparable to those of the
SIU in the years to come. Unions don't
win concessions from the bosses by fol­
lowing the NMU's phoney trade union
line. It is by struggle on the waterfront
that the shipowners are forced to shell
out—and it is the SIU that has in the
past, and will in the future, conduct
such struggles.

Directory of Branches
BRANCH

ADDRESS

PHONE

NEW YORK (4)
2 Stone St
BOwling Green 9-3437
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Cay St
Calvert 4539
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St
Lombard 7651
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS (16) ..309 Chartrcs St
.Canal 3336
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St
Savannah 3-1728
TAMPA
423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St
Dial 2-1392
PUERTO RICO
45 Ponce de Leon
;Puerto de Tierra
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-8043
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway. .. Ft. Lauderdale 1601

CAPITAL'S WAGE HAS
ESCAPED FREEZING

Editor's MaO Bag

Evidence that wage "freezing"
does not apply to the wages of
capital can be found on the finan­
This brain-buster is too smart t(J
CAN'T GET GAS
cial page of any newspaper.
be a plain sailor, and too dumb
On a single day this week the Editor and Brother:
for anything else, so like all fail­
record of disbursements of 1942 There seems to be a work or ures and misfits he makes a lot
earnings showed these increases fight law in Mobile,, originated by of noise.
in payments to stockholders:
the Governor himself. Now the He beefs about our hard-work­
National Dairy Products, 25 draft board says 30 days on the
PUBLICATION OFFICE;
per cent; Beatrice Creamery, 40 beach but the CPA says "go to ing officials, seeing only treach­
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
ery and double dealing in theii;
per cent;,Ward Baking Company, hell."
New York Gty
BOwling Green 9-8346
20 per cent; B. F. Goodrich, 100 In my case I asked for enough activities. He snorts about the
per cent; Humble Oil and Refin­ gas to come to report to the hall way the bosun handles the job.
ing, 40 per cent; American Agri­ twice a week. I live 24 miles out He criticizes the delegate; but
cultural Chemical, 60 per cent; and need the gas to look for never goes delegate himself; it's
Twentieth-Century Fox,, 100 per work. I was rejected flat. So, I too much responsibility and woi'k
cent; McKesson &amp; Robbins, 30 had to get in the best way I for the good of the Union, not his
good!
I
per cent; National Enameling, 50 could—^by bus.
per cent.
I go to the CPA with tears in His latest battle station is taken
Doubtless directors of these my eyes, I haven't slept, I can't up against the Maritilne Com­
The
law
would
have
made
it
companies
were surprised at their get a room, I don't have any gas, mission trainee, against whom ha
Organized labor won a major
possible
to
put
out
of
business
moderation,
since profits, after and I can't get a ship unless I sends his windy blasts as gov­
round this week in its battle to
unions
that
failed
to
abide
by
the
payment
of
taxes, were more report to the hall. But I get no­ ernment-trained potential finks.
knock out state anti-labor laws as
As a matter of fact these kids are
than double those of the previous where.
an unconstitutional infringement myriad of restrictions.
coming into the industry with
year.
on the rights of workers.
In
the
meantime
a
man
comes
BAD PROVISIONS UPHELD
Its first taste of victory came in However, Judge Sackman up­
into the CPA and asks' for gas to basic training paid for by each'
Colorado, where Judge Charles C. held several other bad provisions
take friends on a fishing trip. He and every taxpayer. (Look at
Sackman of Denver held invalid of the bill, including restrictions
gets 100 gallons. A bus driver your deductions. Wise Guy!) In­
the most vicious sections of Col­ on picketing and a list of "unfair
comes in and needs 4 tires, he stead of giving them a bad time,
wouldn't it be wiser to welcome
orado's labor-shackling law, mis­ labor practices" by employes
All tankers and all tank barges gets them.
them and educate them as sea­
called a "labor peace act."
which, when committed, would of more than 100 gross tons in The seaman is just out of luck men to top off their "training?"
Colorado's law is the worst subject the workers and their which crews are divided between because * he doesn't swing any
Wouldn't it be wiser, Wise Guy,
among nearly a dozen passed by unions to fine? and civil damage more than one watch for pur­ crooked votes in this neighbor­
to
make them potential steady
state legislatures during the past suits. Curbs on closed shop agree­ poses of„ steering must hence­ hood.
union
men, rather than probable
year—aU of which are being ments and a ban on "secondary forth be equipped with alarm Who's twar is thiB—Democracy
scabs?
challenged in the courts.
boycotts" were also sustained.
bells, the Coast Giiard rule&lt;j or Politicans?
After aU, they do come out of
Fraternally,
Because
these
repressive
fea­
yesterday in an order published
SECTIONS TOSSED OUT
the
taxpayers' school with more
J. M. TORCHICK, No. 13 G
Judge Sackman threw out the tures are in the bill, the Ameri in the Federal Rogister. The orknowledge
of seamansMp thsm'
sections which call for compul­ can Federation of Labor and its 'der is divided into three sections,
the
draft
or
tourist type of sea­
WISE GUY
sory incorporating of unions and affiliated unions in Colorado will affecting new tank ships upon
man.
i
regulate in detail the legitimate appeal the decision to the state which construction is started no There's one in almost every
crew.
Have
you
noticed
brother?
Supreme
Court,
Joseph
A.
PadR.EJI.B»
Bk.
5881.
activities of unions.
earlier than today,, existing tank­
These sections restrict the way, A. F. of L. general counsel, ers, whether afloat or under con­
FLANNEL MOUTH
amount of dues and initiation declared.
struction yesterday, and tank Pama Takes Union Post
fees unions may charge; compel
barges of more than 100 gross
Johaimes Pama, formerly of
The guy with a voice like 1'
them to open their financial rec­
tons.
thunder
clap and an appetite Hke
the
Liverpool
(England)
office
of
ords to inspection; prohibit con­
The Coast Guard has ruled that
tributions for political purposes, Extra meals money coming to all tankers of more than 100 the Dutch Central Transport Moby Dick the whale. He's usual­
require unions to elect officers following crew members of S. S. gross tdns, the construction of Workers, has assumed the post of ly first in the messroom, and
pounds the table and yells at the
annually; permit the state Indus­ Woodrldge Ferris; J. Davis, J which is begun on and after Sep­
assistant district secretary here, messman if his grub isn't served
trial Commission to send agents Dedicatoria, Fred Williams, Harry tember 15, 1943, shall have all
into union meetings for a check Harris, John Brown, and William sleeping accommodations and according to an announcement pronto.
on proceedings, and allow mem­ Davis.
machinery spaces equipped with made yesterday by P. J. Vanden- Stretching his flannel mouth'
bers who do not like anything a Overtime is coming to follow a sufficient number of alarm^ berge, head of the union's Ameri­ like an old undershirt, he bolts
union does to apply either to the ing crew members of 3. S. bells so located as to warn all can branch. Mr. Pama arrived in his. vituals and yells again for
commission or the courts to over­ Charles Ayeock: Paul Huffer, Leo occupants.
seconds before the man across
this country last week.
ride the majority decision of the Manaugh, J, M. Hughley and A,
Mr. 'Vandenberge said Mr. the table has gotten his soup.
union.
Langly,
Pama's transfer was one of sev­ Isn't it about time to put a shot
eral moves made by his group, an across this double-bottom's bul­
affiliate of the International bous bow and blink the following
KEEP CLEAR WITH YOUR DRAFT BOARD
Transport Workers Federation, in message:
the interest of general efficiency "See Preamble in Union Book,
By observing the following simple instructions you will
and in line with the steadily ex­ Paragraph Six—the right to be
continue to receive deferment from military service. Fail
panding part being played by treated in a decent and respect­
to observe these rule.s and you may wind up in the army.
Dutch shipping in t^e war effort. ful manner by those in com­
Edward C. Brown
WHEN SIGNING ON: Give the clerk or skipper all the
He also disclosed that G. E. mand."
Joe Kirk
information necessary to fill out RMO Card No. 47 (Green
Esveldt, veteran head of the The messman, as a workingH. Hamson
Card).
Dutch union's main office in man and seaman, is entitled to
Chester Smith
WHEN SIGNING OFF: See that Card No. 48-A is propLondon, is en route to Curacao, the same rights as the men he
C. Qlde
perly fidled out by skipper or clerk. •
wljcre he wll take charge of serves. Let's give him a break
D. H. Mathews
that office's reorganization. He is and put a stopper on the brothers 11
Marvin West
Ship out before your allotted time ashore has expired.
being replaced in the London who yell at him as if he were a
Eugene Kilasinski
If you have not yet flUed out the Green Card, contact your
branch by G. J. "Vandenwoesty- flea-bitten dog.
F. Clark
draft board and let them know that you are sailing.nen.
Book A 5881, SIU.
D. Sannit

Labor Wins Victory In
War On Anti-Union Laws

TANKER ALARM BELL
^VSTEM ORDERED

MONEY DUE

�KiAv-

17, Itis

tkia ifeHtiilt&amp;lii ^&lt;&gt;G

Pa^ Thrf

For 'New England'
" consecutive hours. It also deyear and because the cost of
ployees working on dredging ees, however, maintain families
sires that Quartermasters
living has risen by more
boats in the inland water ashore and get home as frequ­
work eight hours per day bas­
than 15% since the time of
ways of New England are ently
their work schedule will
ed on the three watch system.
the last increase.
substantially higher than permit, The Stewardess Depart­
(2) The- wage rates paid by the
rates paid for similar work ment employees work nine hours
B. The Issues
Company are considerably
performed
by employees of within a spread of twelve while
1. Increase in Monthly Base
lower than rates paid for
the
Company.
other employees are on a conse­
Rates
similiar work on the Great (5) The wage rates paid by the cutive eight hour day. In the
(a) Union Position
Lakes and in the New York
Company are so low that Deck Department, however. Sec­
The Union, at the hearing held
area on passenger freight
they constitute a substandard ond Mates, Boatswains and Deck­
by the Panel, argued in favor of
boats, tow boats and dredges;
level of wages.
hands work eight hours within a
a $40.00 increase in the monthly
the differential between these (b) Company Position
spread of ten except during the
base rates of all classifications on
rates has increased during
At the hearing before the summer months.
the following grounds^
the past few years.
Panel the Company stated General wage increases grant­
(1) While the general increases (3) Work performed on two boats
that its position was the same ed by the Company in 1941 clear­
granted to the employees
and dredges is similiar to
as it had taken before^, the ly exceed 15%. Within the
during the summer and fall
work, in the same classifica­
Referee of the Board in De­ Board's maladjustment policy the
of 1941 amounted to an av­
tions, performed on the Comcember, T942; that it agreed consideration of the rise in cost
erage of approximately 23%,
p a n y' s "passenger - freight
with the Referee's Report of living, therefore, cannot be
these increases should be disboats. Comparison with two
and Recommendations; and made a factor in the examination
• regarded in the .computation
boats rates and dredging
that in its opinion the May 12 of the Union's demand for a wage
of allowable maladjustment
boat rates is, therefore, justi­
directive of the Economic increase.
fied.
increase
because
the
in­
BACKGROUND
Stabilization Director in no The Union has argued in be­
creases of 194% should have (4) Rates paid by the U. S. Army
On August 31, 1942, the Union
way effected the conclusions half of a comparison or rates paid
been granted in the previous
Engineers to civilian emgave notice to the Company that
reached by the Referee.
by the Company with rates paid
it desired to reopen those sec­
The Company pointed out that in the Great Lakes and New
tions of their agreement of Octo­
the employees had been given in­ York areas. The panel is of the
ber 1, 1941 which related to wage
creases in excess of 15% since opinion that a direction compari­
rates and overtime. During the
January, 1941 and that no in­ son of rates in such widely sep­
negotiations which followed, the
crease was therefore allowable arated areas is not justified under
parties were unable to agree up­
under the maladjustment policy the Board's policy but that if pos­
on the disposition of the issues
of
the Board. It further present­ sible the procedure laid down
the
resources
and
labor
of
about
GALVESTON
raised. The ease was, thereupon,
400,000,000 people. Joe knows all ed the argument that no similar under the directive of The Eco­
certified to the National War La­
of this. Also he remembers how passenger freight operates at nomic Stabilization Director for
Shipping and business is good Russia lost Finland, Lithunia present either in New England or determination of whether wage
bor Board, on December 9, 1942.
A^ Referee of the Board held around this neck of the woods Latvia, Estonia, and part of Po elsewhere in the country, and adjustments are justified, should
hearings -on the case on Decem­ I have shipped everything that land. He knows who took them that, therefore, no comparison be followed.
There are no directly compar­
ber 30, 1942, and issued his Re­ looks like a seaman. Have a new and why they did. He also re can be made with wage levels of
members how Newton Baker, other boats. It argued that no able passenger-freight boats op­
port and Recommendations on ship out in a few days.
February 9, 1943. He recommend­ Well, the sweater boys are out with Pres. Wilson's consent anc comparison can properly be made erated in the inland water ways
ed denial of the demands of the in front of the Houston Press without the consent of Congress with other companies operating of New England. The work per­
as provided for in our Constitu in other areas. The Company also formed* by some classifications of
Union. The Regional War Labor Newspaper plant in Houston,
Board for the'First Region ap­ has no effect at aU on the news tion, made war on Russia in 1919 claimed that comparison with the workers employed by the Com­
proved the Referee's recommen­ paper, but it does give the pants He may also remember that we dredges operated by the U.S. pany is, however, admittedly
dations on April 26, 1943. The pressors and the button hole would not recognize his govern­ Army Engineers would not con­ comparable to work performed
by similar classifications on othef
Union appealed the case to the sailors a little exercise out in the ment until the administration of stitute a fair comparison.
Pres. Roostevelt. He may remem­ The Company acknowledged inland waterway boats. The
National War Labor Board in hot sun.
Washington. On June 9, 1943, the I had two ships to sign on, but ber a bitter statement made by that the work of firemen and oil­ Panel has, therefore, examined
National War Labor Board re­ they would not go for anything Churchill when Joe was fighting ers on passenger freight boats is rates paid to these classifications
ferred the case back to the Board but Rider 64. I had a talk the Hero Mannerheim a few years similar to that of firemen and by companies operating boats in
in Region I for reconsideration in other day with a captain who ago. The Finns were destroying oilers on other island waterway the inland waterways of New
the light of the May 12 directive just came over from New Or a division of Russians every day, boats; that the work of deck­ England. It has found that the
of the Economic Stabilization-Di­ leans; he stated that he had gone and then surrendered.
hands is not comparable in all wage rates paid by the Company
to the USS Hotel in that city to The Finns came from the respects; and that the work of in these classifications is consid­
rector.
The Panel was appointed to get a room, and to see just what Volga, were conquered by the other classifications cannot be erably lower than the lowest
review the case, hold hearings it was like. The clerk at the Swedes in the 13th and 14th cen­ compared at all with that of rates paid by other companies
examined. Since most of the
and make recommendations to desk pulled out a form, waifiting turies, absorbed by Russia in other types of boats.
other companies operate out of
the Board. The Panel held a to know how long he had been 1806 and had the Russian langu­ (c) Discussion
I-' hearing on July 24, 1943 in Nfew going to sea, where he was bom age imposed in 1811. In 1919 The following is the monthly Boston, the Panel considered the
Bedfor(i, Massachusetts and af­ and why, his license number; Finland was taken from Russia wage rate now paid by the Com­ difference in labor market wage
level between Boston and New
forded fee parties full opportun­ wife's name and address, and al by the Whites-German soldiers pany:
Bedford. Upon giving considera­
kinds
of
crap.
The
captain
in­
under Hero Mannerheim.
ity to be heard.
PURSERS DEPARTMENT
tion
to both the industry differ­
formed them that he wanted
Japan is a menace to Russia
THE ISSUES
$170.00 ential in the classifications com­
room nnd not charity, and what that Stalin would like to end, bun Pursers
A. Summary of the Union
pared and the area differential in
was the idea of wanting to know he will get what he wants in the Ticket Collector and
Demands
Baggagemasters
115.00 wage levels, the Panel concludes
all of this dope. Result, the gent West before he will give us the
that these classifications should
1. That the monthly scale of walked out and went to another aid we need against Japan. Joe
DECK DEPARTMENT
be granted a $15.00 per month
wages for each classification hotel. It can be understood why remembers how he aided the Re­ Second Mates
128.00 wage increase.
they want all of this dope. One publicans in Spain while Eng
be raised by $40-00.
Boatswains
102.50
These are established differen­
2. That an increase in the hourly copy of it is sent to the RMO and land, Franca and our State De- Quartermasters
97.50 tials among the various classifi­
rate of pay for all classifica­ they, have the finger right on you. pairtment helped Franco and our Watchmen
90.00 cations of employees working for
tions be given for work done As I stated a few weeks ago in oil companies sold Franco gaso- Ablebodied Seamen
92.00 the Company. In order to main­
while boats, are not in Line the LOG, Duschare, the NMU ine.
Ordinary Seamen
tain the logic of the internal
Service. The present scale is agept was in line for the secre­
(Utility Men)
82.50 wage structure of the Company
Who
would
Stalin
hurt
if
he
tary's
job
of
the
USS
when
it
85e, 60c and 65c per hour. The
regained those countries? Some
ENGINE DEPARTMENT '
the Panel is of the opinion that
Union desires that the rate be opens here. Has turned out to be andlords and other exploiters.
set at a uniform level of $1.00 a true fact. There were two la­ England's army in Iran could Oilers
$102.50 $15.00 per month increase be
dies from the merchant marine
97.50 granted to each of the classifica­
per hour.
have aided Russia in the Cauca­ Firemen
3. That an increase in the hourly auxiliary paid me a visit in the sus and some bases on the Black Wipers
77.50 tions-of employees employed by
the Company.
overtime rate for aU classifi­ hall last week, and they wanted Sea East of Turkey could be used
STEWARDS DEPARTMENT
The Panel is also of the opin­
cations be raised by ten cents me to let every one know of the to destroy the oil fields of Ru­
'irst Cooks
$122.50 ion that these wage adjustments
good work that they are doing
per hour.
mania. Why doesn't Stalin ask
97.00 be made retroactive to the date
4. That eight hours should con­ for the boys who are in the hos that kind of aid along with the Second Cooks
irirst
Lunchmen
97.00
of the certification of the issue to
stitute a day's work for the pital, and they also want it to be Komrades in the NMU who are
Second Lunchmen
87.00 the National War Labor Board
Deck Department throughout known that they ^e not connect­
shouting for a second front?
75.00 and that the retroactive pay be
the year. Elimination from ed with the NMU, USS or any Could it be that Curran is being Head Porters
Porters
70.00
distributed in accordance with
other
organization.
They
are
out
the Agreement of the provis­
pushed aside by his fellow trav­ Stewardess
70.00
the Board's general policy on this
to
help
in
any.
Way
they
can,
the
ion that for other than the
elers in the NMU and,^has gone Messmen
74.00
question.
seamen
in
the
hospital,
and
they
time that the summer sched­
to Russia to see about starting a Employees are given two days
ule is in effect the Second were doing that before the US3 purge, and getting all of the dope
2. Increase for Off-Line Service
off each month and receive an
Mates, Boatswains and Deck­ was ever heard of.
Work
of how it is ^one by Mustache
hands may be placed on a What will Stalin do when Ger­ Joe. Your guess is as good as extra day's pay for work on Sun­ Bi Union Position
schedule of eight hours with­ many is defeated? Your guess is mine. But Curran or Stalin will day. The employees receive, on
Each of the two boats now
in a period of ten hours. The as good as minfi^, but I think that never see the day that they can the average, two meals a day on
operated
by the Company is
}oard the boats and sleeping
Union desires that overtime he will trade hard. Our war with purge the SIU or the SUP.
taken
off
its regular run for
quarters are available for the
be paid these employees for Japan will be a long one without
£. R. WALLACE. Agent men. Practically aU the employ­
(Continued on Page 4)
any time worked after eight the aid of .Russia. Japan now has
(Continued from Page 1)
gaged in passenger and freight
transportation, operating a year
round service from New Bedford
and Woods Hole to the island of
Martha's Vineyard and Nantuck­
et. -The Company employs ap­
proximately 75 employees on the
two boats used by it.
THE UNION
The Seafarers International
Union of North America is affili­
ated with the American Federa­
tion of Labor. It entered into its
first agreement with the Com­
pany on July 18, 1939. The sec­
ond agreement was entered into
on July 30, 1940, following an
arbitration hearing. The last
agreement became effective Octo­
ber 1, 1941.

Around The Ports

i'-fti,'. y- r "•J."

yk'. • r:

�Page Four

II,

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

$15 Boost Won For^New England'
{Continued on Page 3)
approximately six weeks each
year to permit maintenance
and overhauling work to be
done on the boat. Employees
in the Engine, Deck and Stew­
ards Departments are general­
ly employed on an hourly
basis to perform some of this
work. The Company also em­
ploys a separate group of
maintenance workers. Fol­
lowing are the homdy rates
paid to the regular crew for
such work:

in the tasks performed in the
various departments. They
should be maintained.

RECOMMENDATIONS
It is hereby recommended that

Friday. September 17, 1943

Out of the Focsl
by

1. Effective as of the payroll pe
Rate of Overtime Pay
riod immdeialely following
The present arrangement on
December 9, 1942, the date of
We have visited the A^idrew Furuseth Club on 37th Street and
overtime provides that any em­
certification of the issues to the American Theatre Wing on 43rd Street, and have been invited
ployee regardless of classification
the National War Labor to parties at the Cosmopolitan Club and the Women's Republican
shall receive eighty cents per
Board, the monthly base rate Club, but our last visit was jhe JANET ROPER CLUB on 3 East 67th
hoxu- overtime pay. The union
for all classifications of work Street, the best Seamen's Club in town. The property was formerly
raised no objection to the pay­
be increased by $15.00.
the home of Thomas Fortune Ryan. Now the seamen are having
ment of the same overtime rate
the pleasure of using this palatial spot for their own recreation. The
to all employees, but argued that 2. Effective as of the payroll pe­ club is open every day except Sunday from 2 to 11 P.M. It would
the rate should be raised to nine­
riod immediately following be worth your while to visit the place.
/
ty cents per hour. The Company
December 9, 1943, the hourly
AAA
opposed the position of the Union
rates of pay to employees
Hubert Wyckoff's restriction on seamen bringing in souvenirs
and argued that the present rate
working on off-Line Service
Stewards Department ....$ .55
from the war zones is evidence that he never was a boy. What harm
is
a^air
one.
work
be
increased
by
five
Deck Department
6(i
could be done by seamen bringing in iron crosses and helmets?
cents (5c).
Engine Department
65 The Panel can sec no justifica­
They want to show it to their friends and after tlie war will be
The Union's request for in­ able to tell off these guys who will accuse them of not having dona
The Union's position is these tion for changing the rate of
overtime
pay.
The
present
rate
.
crease
in overtime rate of pay anything during the war, by showing them these souvenirs.
rates should be made uniform
of
eighty
cents
represents
com­
ishereby
denied.
AAA
and that $1.00 per hour should
be paid to all employees. The pensation of more than time and
Ted
Crocker
is
now
in
the Army. When he last paid us a visit
Union argued that the Referee one-half for most employees even 4. The Union's request for a we informed him that his di'aft board was looking for him. He
change to a consecutive eight
had mistakenly compared this under the wage scale recom­
hour scheduie ali year round failed to heeS our warning. He is no^^ doing harbor patrol duty.
work with common labor mended by the Panel.
for the Second Mates, Boat­ It is reported that Don'Ronan and six other A.B.'s are on the beach
work performed in the New
swains and Deckhands and an in the Persian Gulf. Carroll Quinnt's bag was shipped here from
Bedford area. According to 4. Scheduling of the Eight
Hours of Work
eight hour pay day three Pennsylvania, and he may secure it in Room 213. We noticed that
the Union the work performed
The Union argued in favor of
watch system for Quartermas­ Max Longfellow was back in New York again.
is mainly painting and that
extending the practice of paying
ters is hereby denied. The
the rates paid by the Com­
overtime
for
all
time
worked
af­
Company is urged, however,
pany are, therefore, too low.
ter - eight consecutive hours to
to met this scheduie whenever
the Second Mates, Boatswains
it is practicabie and to give
Company Position
and
Deckhands. It also argued
these employees their two
The Company argued that
hours off while the boats are
the work performed is not of in behalf of an eight hour day for
docked at New Bedford..
a skilled nature and should Quartermasters based on a three
{Continued from Page 1)
Respectfully submitted,
properly be paid rates com­ watch system. What the Union
that prime requisites to solution
parable to unskilled labor. It desires to eliminate is the prac­
A
pay
rise
_
of
5c
an
hour
for
of
the manpower problem are
DANIEL L. HOROWITZ
pointed out that when these tice of working eight hours with­
approximately 15,000 longshore­ wages at decent levels, adequate
Representing
the
Public
employees did painting work in ten during nine months of the
men in fifteen Gulf and South housing, payment of transporta­
it was rough painting and year. It present the eight conse­
THOMAS BOWE,
Atlantic Coast ports from Char- tion costs to workers moving to
could not be compared to that cutive hour schedule applies to
Representing the Employees eston, S. C., to BrownsvUle, Tex., new jobs, and other safeguards.
of a skilled painter. The these employees only during the
lias been approved by the Na­
BRADFORD KENYON,
Company does have" in its summer months.
Labor members of the War
tional War Labor Board.
Representing the Employers
employ painters whose job it The Company argued that the
Manpower
Commission's laborThe International Longshore­
is to do the more skilled summer sailing schedule makes
management
. policy committee
men's Association, AFL, repre­
painting and to mix paints. possible the eight consecutiye
tried
to
put
over
such a program
sents
the
men
covered
by
the
Here is the Directive Order of
The work done, according to hour work schedule for these
some
time
ago.
the Regional Board which ap­ WLB order. Thirteen maritime
the Company, is comparable classifications. At other times in
proved the foregoing recommen­ associations and individual ship­ LABOR SAFEGUARDS URGED
at most to that of a painter's the year the sailing schedule is
ping companies joined with the
dations.
helper, and the present rates such that unless the eight within
union in separate applications to They demanded, too, that if
are, in the opinion of the Com­ ten hour work schedule obtained,
DIRECTIVE ORDER
the board for approval of the workers are to be prodded to
pany, adequate compensation the Company would regularly be
general increase and of various shift to new jobs they should, be
for this work.
The
Regional
War
Labor
Board
protected against being sent tQ
required to pay for considerable
ocal adjustments.
s
for
the
First
Region,
acting
as
the
overtime. The two hours off is
The board aproved the increase plants paying lower wages, ot
Discussion
djily
authorized
agent
of
the
Na­
which have miserable working
Since it appeeirs that work not given at one time, but is tional War Labor Board, and pur­ to compensate the Gulf and conditions, or which are in viola­
performed by. the employees broken up during the day. The suant to the powers vested in said South Atlantic longshoremen un­ tion of orders from the War La­
on the boats while the boats Union complained that the men Board by Executive Orders No. der the "Little Steel" formula bor Board or National Labor Re­
are off line service is made up may be called back to work at 9017 of January 12, 1942, and No. and to re-establish a differential lations Board.
of a number of miscellaneous any time during their time off 9250 of October 3, 1942, the Act between rates in North and
tasks which vary with the De­ and that they, therefore, frequ­ of Congress of October. 2, 1942, South Atlantic ports which has Industry members of the com­
existed since 1936. In November, mittee voted against the proposal,
partment to which they are ently get their two hours off in and the War Labor Disputes Act 1942^
the board approved a 5c intwenty
minute
stretches.
The
attached, it appears inadequ­
of June 25, 1943, hereby directs crease for ILA longshoremen in however, and as things stand now
Company
acknowledged
that
men
there are no national standards
ate to describe their work as
that:
•
^
'
North Atlantic ports.
to protect workers being trans­
rough painting. They do some sometimes get their two hours
overhauling and general clear­ off in several smaller periods, but The recommendations of the The basic rate for longshore­ ferred, union chiefs said.
ing up in their respective de­ claimed that whenever possible Panel dated August 2, 1943 are men in South Atlantic ports is These safeguards must be put
partments. The work is not the time off is scheduled when approved and made the Directive 75c an hour with rates for cer­ into effect, they argued, before
tain cargoes and warehousing workers will submit to any plan
altogether that of painter's the boats dock at New Bedford Order of the Board.
ranging from 48c to 65c an hour. for wholesale trahsfers drafted in
and,
since
there
is
stop
Over
at
helpers nor is it entirely com­
The procedure to be foUowed Basic wage rates in Gulf ports Washington.
New
Bedford
of
from
one
to
two
parable to common labor.
in making the retroactive- pay­ range from 75c to $1.10 an hour.
Some familiarity with the and three quarters hours, the
ment of those employees who These rates compare with a
men
get
most
of
their
time
off
in
work is a necessary requisite.
have either quit or ben discharg­ North Atlantic basic rate of $1.25
one period.
ed shall be in accordance with an hour.
The Panel is of the opinion
that the rates paid for this The Panel, believes that wher­ the annexed copy of the Board's The new rates in Gulf and
South Atlantic ports are effective
work should more properly be ever possible work should be Resolution,-of April 2, 1943.
January 1, 1943..
compared with the general scheduled on a consecutive time
WILLIAM ASKSON
Unless a Petition for Reviews
The board also approved a
wage" structure of the com­ schedule. It does not feel justi­
is filed with the National War
Your book and papers are be­
general increase of 5c an hour for
pany than with jobs which at fied in eliminating the eight
Labor
Board withm 14 days of
within
ten
hour
work
rule,
how­
ing
held for you by the Philadel­
clerks and checkers in Mobile,
best are only partly compar­
the date of issue shown above,
ever,
since
this
practice
would
phia
Shipping Commissioner.
Ala., and elimination of wage
able in the area. The Panel
this Order will become final and rate differentials between dock
appear
to
be
a
practical
necessity
therefore recommends that an
binding as the Order of the Na­
Keep In Touch With
and ship labor at Port Ever­
increase of five cents per hour for the efficient and. economical
tional War Labor Board.
operation
of
the
boats
during
the
glades, Fla.
be granted for this work. This
Your Local Draft Board,
is approximately equivalent time that the winter schedule is
SAUL WALLEN, Chairman
to the $15.00 per month in­ in .effect. The Panel, therefore,
CLARENCE G. McDAVITT
crease recommended for the recommends that the Union's re&gt;,
ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
quest
be
denied,
but
that
whem
year round base rales.
WALtE
McGUINN
ever possible the Company should
WEEK OF AUG. 30th TO SEPT. 4th.
There appears to be no cog­ attempt to arrange for a consecu­
C. LAWRENCE MUENCH
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL
ent reason for the elimination tive work schedule for the classi­
\
FRANK
M.
HEAVEY
of the differentials among the fications involved and also at­
m
SHIPPED
328
297
280
895
rates now paid to the various
JEREMIAH A. LINEHAN
departipents. The differentials tempt to arrange for time off
REGISTERED
246
211
150
807
reflect the past evaluation by while the boats are in dock at EFECTIVE DATE:
September 24, 1943.
the parties of the differences New Bedford.
3.

WLB Gives 15,000 Screws Tightened
Longshoremen
On Labor Control
Pay Raise

fe'

I

Wm
j'

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•&gt;g;

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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
$15 BOOST WON FOR 'NEW ENGLAND' MEN; 5 CENT OFF-LINE WORK INCREASE&#13;
SCREWS TIGHTENED ON LABOR CONTROL&#13;
NMU AND "STABILIZATION"&#13;
LABOR WINS VICTORY IN WAR ON ANTI-UNION LAWS&#13;
CAPITAL'S WAGE HAS ESCAPED FREEZING&#13;
TANKER ALARM BELL SYSTEM ORDERED&#13;
PAMA TAKES UNION POST&#13;
FLANNEL MOUTH&#13;
WLB GIVES 15,000 LONGSHOREMEN PAY RAISE</text>
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                <text>9/17/1943</text>
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                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
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                    <text>OFFICIAL OBGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTEICT,
SEAFASESS' INTEBNATIONAL XTKION OF NORTH AMERICA
VOL. V.

w

NEW YORK. N. Y.. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 24. 1943

PRISONERS OF WAR
AND UNIONISM
AN EDITORIAL —

No. 26

Nominations Open;
1944 Seen As Most
Critical Year Yet

A second SIU ship arrived in port this past week on
which German prisoners of war had been used to do sailor's
HISTORIC WORDS
work. This ship belonged to the Bull Line and during
"The establishment of equal
passage from North Africa back to New York, 15 selected
prisoners chipped and painted the entire boat deck. Had pay for equal work as the un­
derlying principle in these ne­
the shipowner observed the union contract and used the gotiations is crucial to the
crew for this work, it would have been necessary to break continued life of this union."
out the watch below and the result would have been 800
—NMD Vice President
hours overtime.
McKenzie to the ship­
owners in the current
In short, the crew is $720 the poorer, the shipowner is
contract negotiations.
that much to the good, and the German prisoners, their
(Translation—If the NMU
own unions having been smashed by Hitler and the German
doesn't get the same wages
bosses, are now being used by the American shipowners in
and conditions won by the
an attempt to repeat the pattern here.
SIU, the rank and file is

Annual nominations for officers of the Atlantic and
Gulf District of the SIU opened this week and will con­
tinue through the Monday night meeting of Sept. 27. All
elective offices — Secretary-Treasurer, Agents and Patrol­
men—will be filled for the year of 1944 in the elections to
:
•be held during November and
I December.

High Wage Myth

This election may well turn
out to be one of the most import­
ant ever held by the union. It is
not out of the question for the
war to end during 1944, and the
union officials then in office will
face grave decisions and respon­
sibilities. We all expect a full
scale shipowner offensive against
our conditions once the war is
out of the way, and the incoming
officers will no doubt be called
upon to lead the most militant
actions in defense of our con­
tracts—and even in defense of
our very existance as a. trade
union. Lockouts and strikes and
picket lines are in prospect and
the most steadfast and militorrt
leadets will be required,
membership should bear this in
mind, and not conduct nomina­
tions in a routine and half-heart­
ed manner.

All the hullabaloo about high
wages sounds pretty hollow
alongside a shocking report just
issued by L. Metcalfe Walling,
administrator of the Wag and
HornAct.
going to leave the union.)
This practice of having war prisoners doing seamen's
Unbelievable as the figures
work and thereby undermining organized labor, is a flag­
seem, about 12,500,000 workers
rant violation of the union contracts and a violation of the
are employed in industries for
Statement of Principle and Policy signed by the Unions and
which a minimum wage of 40
cents
an hour was established
the government in the spring of 1942: We have no inten­
during
the year, or for which ap­
tion of standing idly by while the shipowners chisel the
plications for wage hikes are
contracts in this manner.
*
*
pending. Walling said.
By J. K. SHAUGHNESSY
Even after the 12,500,000 work­
The sight of the German prisoners on our ships is a
ersare given a guaranteed 40•nie
most
hectic
event
of
the
Constant reniinder of what ciri happert to pien wh^n. their
cent minimum. Walling asserted,
season
was_held
last
Wednesday
unions are smashed by the bosses. We* have no intention of
evening at the Legion Hall here there will still be many workers
letting it happen here.
in Fort Lauderdale. The crew of in-other fields being paid less.
the S. S. Seatrain New Orleans "Despite a public impression
pitched in the works and held that • wartime wages are high,"
the most successful dance and en­ Walling emphasized, "the War
tertainment that has ever been Labor Board has deemed it nec­
As for eligibility for office, the
put on, by and for seamen.
essary to allow employers, with­ union constitution provides that
out specific permission, to raise
All merchant seamen and their rates to 40 cents an horn. This any member (who can qualify)
friends were invited to attend was done because the board was may nominate himself for office in
By A. W. Armstrong
and have a good time, and they flooded with requests from em­ the last two meetings in Septem­
Receiving word of mouth tales of the invasions and turned out about two hundred ployers and employes who had ber. He must file written notifi­
strong. There was plenty to eat previously not been paying or re­ cation of nomination, along with
the part that the merchant marine is playing. Of course, and
proof of qualifications, and this
plenty to drink. In fact the
at this time it is impossible to tell these tales but when the boys and their friends consumed ceiving this much."
must be in the office of the Sec­
Walling recalled that employer
war is over there may be some first class reading printed over ten gallons of good Cana­ members on committees named retary-Treasurer not later than
October 15.
dian Whiskey and Cuban Rum.
ill the LOG. I would suggest that all Agents and patrolmen On top of this there was three to consider wages in two large
at this time take time to get this^
industries voted almost solidly To be eligible for elective of­
to the door and there is cross- kegs of beer that disappeared
first hand information and when
against establishing rates "as fice, the candidate must:
some place.
town
service
within
two
blocks.
the war is over then we may be
Most of the local officials, both high as 40 cents an hour." This 1. Be a citizen of the United
I, acting for the union, offered
able to compile it in such a fash­
would indicate. Walling said, that States of America.
the company the sum of Fifteen city and county, 'were invited,
ion that we can hand down a
lower
rates were still being paid
but they thought that this event
2. Be a full member of the
real history of our union during thousand^ dollars, subject to the would be a knock down and and that labor could still be ob­
concurance of the membership.
SIU,
in continuous good standing
war time.
drag-out affair so their dignity tained for less than 40 cents an for a period of six months imme­
hour.
I expect the most interesting A few days latter a counter would not permit them to attend. The principal reason employers diately prior to the date of nom­
proposal was offered by the com­ Much to the surprise of the lo­
ination.
news at this time for the mem­
pany, they were asking $19,000. cal dignitaries this turned out to are fighting the 40-cent minimum,
bership is the progress being
I told them this was out of the be the most well-behaved group it was indicated, is that they 3. If a candidate for Agent or
made regarding a hall here in
question and that we would for­ of men in the entire city of Fort know when once established the joint phtrolman, have three years
New Orleans. To give the mem­
rate will "stand as a bulwark for of sea service in any one of three
get the whole thing. After talk­ Lauderdale.
bers a short resume, some months
both employers and workers departments; if candidate for de­
ing with the city's reality expert
ago we started getting a commit­
Even the newspapers gave out against competitive wage slash­ partmental patrolman must have
he told me that he thought that
tee together to look over various
if we would split the * difference with favorable publicity. Which ing in the period of readjustment three years sea service in the de­
buildings. For quite some time
we might be able to buy the is something for the press in this after the war when our soldiers partment specified. Sea service
we looked at this and that and building. I took this up with the
shall mean sea time on merchant
come home."
{Continued on Page 3)
found a couple that would have meeting Monday night and this
ships.
done, but the members here took
4. Have no record of miscon­
meeting authorized me to offer
the attitude that since we were this price in " cash. By paying
duct while previously employed
going to buy that it would be
as an officer of the union.
cash for the hall we wpuld save
Boston fishermen, victim of OPA price ceilings on fish
foolish to buy something that
all that six pef cent carrying
Think it over brothers. Plenty
would not be satisfactory for all
catches, will conduct a strike ballot beginning September 29.
charge.
of storms are blowing up and
time. V o at last found this hall
Members of the Atlantic Fishermen's Union, SIU, the men
Since the meeting I have got a
your union deserves the best of­
that has been in the minutes for line on another building in this
will
vote by crews as they hit the beach throughout the week.
ficers. Don't make a nomination
the last few weeks. This hall is
same district that we are now in.
The vote will be taken under the provisions of the Smithlightly and capriciously. Do make
located at 1835 Magazine St. It We have looked the building
a nomination with a view to
Connally Act, and will be supervised by the National Labor
is close to the docks but 18
over, and though it is not nearly
clearing the decks for action
blocks from the heart of town.
Relations Board.
against the enemy.
There is street car service right
{Continued on Page 3)

Florida Branch
Throws Successful
Party For Seamen

Agent Reports Progress
u In Search For SIU Hall

STRIKE VOTE!

�THE

Page Two

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. September 24, 1943 ?
:

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

• •• •- '-'&gt;1 ";l

Merchant Seamen Upgrade School Functions
Stick To TheirJobs Are Explained By USMS

Merchant seamen and officers
September 20, 1943 j
are Staying on theit jcibs deSfiite Seafarers IriteTriatibnal IJnion
" •
weather^ eiiemy actiofl, or the 2 Stone Street
constant strain of repeated sea New York, N. Y.
duty, according to figures releas­ Attention: Mr. Williams
ed by Marshall E. Dimock, Assis­
Affiliated with the American Pederation of Labor
,
tant Deputy Adihihistrator of the Deaf Sir:
War
Shipping
Administration.
HARRY LUNDEBERG ------ "President
Thank you for your interest in our school. This tfairiing station*
Based on figures
corhpiled tvas established in order to break the bottleneck of shortages of
110 Market Stf^t, San Francisco, Calif.
since March IS, 1943, there has Able Bodied fieameri. Any ordinary eearftari who is an American
been an "absenteeiSni'' of leSs citizen With deck time a§ follows is qualified:
JOHN HAWR. - - - _ t ^ - $ecy-TttaS,
' ' ^ •
than six and one half per cent of
p. O. Sox 25, Station P., New York City
Six to riihe months require One month training.
. '
all officers ahd then einployed by
More
than
nirie
months
Will
receive
a
maximum
of
fifteen
American
iherchailt
Ships,
the
teMATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Reff^
days' training. (Men with ability usually complete this
pbrt shows. During that period
424 J th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
training in about six days.)
more than 104,000 merchant sea­
•
•
•
men shipped frorii Uriited States
Seamen who are graduates of a U, S. Maritime Service
ports and only 6,600 of these haVe
Directory of Branches
Training Station or training ships need only three months
failed to re-ship after their initial
and will receive the same trairiirig as meri with more than
or consequent voyages. The ma-^
PHONE
ADDRESS
BRANCH
nine months.
jority of these who did hot go
NEW YORK (4)
2 Stone St
BOwHng Green 9-3437
The school is operi from fl:45 A.M. to 4:00 P.M., Moriday throUgK
BOSTON (lOl
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
back
to sea after concluding a
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Gay St
..Calvert 4539
Saturday.
Meri are efirolled as Seameri, first claSs and are paid
voyage were prevented from do­
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St
Lombard 765 1
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
$66.00
per
month
plus $3.00 per day for subsistence and lodging.
ing
so
because
of
reasons
of
NEW ORLEANS (16) ..309 ChaitreS St
Canal 3336
Time spent in this course will not count against time ashore undeij
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St...
Savannah 3-1728
health.
TAMPA
,423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
MOBILE
55 Co. Conception St
Dial 2-1392
"Few industries anywhere cari Selective Service Regulations.
PUERTO RICO
45 Ponce de Leon
Puetto de TIerra
You, who are connected with the sea can appreciate the immatch the marvelous record of
GALVESTON.
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-8043
FT. LAUDERDALE. .. .. .2021 S. Federal Highway... Ft. Lauderdale I Ml
poftarice
of this work. May we request that you send to this station
our .merchant searacn," Mr. Di­
all
ordinary
seamen sailing as AB's and all ordinary seamen With
mock said. "It is bfie of which
the
requisite
amount of sea time. Men in other cities should apply
the Unions, the companies and
the War Shipping Administra­ to the Enfollirig Office, U. S. Maritime Service and their trarisporPUBLICATION OFFICE:
tion can be proud. When Ameri­ tatiori will be paid upon erirollment to the Upgrade School in NeW;
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
cans
consider the risks these York, New OfleariS of San Francisco which ever is nearest.
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8346
men take and the conditions un­
Your fullest cooperation is requested and deeply appreciated. '
der which they sail they will
xa
Very truly yours,
fully understand that such a low
rate of attrition cari only rriean
FRANK A. FLORS.
extreme loyalty and courage be­
Ensign, U.S.M.S.
yond the line of duty.
Officer-in-Charge, (acting)
"With each new invasion, with
Big Business, brass bats and the government are now each new ship off the ways, the
number of men in the Merchant
beating the drums for the passage of the Austili-Wads- Marine will have to iricrease,"
worth labor draft bill. This bill would freeze workers to Mr. Dimock continued. "The
Merchant Marine has a job that
their jobs (their wages are already frozen) and would give grows
in size every day. Sicily
the Washington bureaucracy a real strangle hold bn the was double what Africa called
for and the pext invasion may
very lives of the workers.
i
call for even more.
NEW YORK, N. Y.—ITF— Among the gains secured in
This is forced labor based on the fascist pattern. It "There are two ways to get the Step by step the Italian workers the past few weeks is the restor­
are regaining their former rights
of shop stewards and union
would take from labor the rights won over many y0a.rs of increased persoririel we • heed. and febUildirig the trade union ation
representatives in industrial es­
We must trairi men for the eritfy
struggle. Under the guise of meeting a war emergency, it ratings arid recruit cxpeHericed movement smashed in nearly tablishments. An agfcemcflt con­
would place in the hands of the government and the men now ashore for the qualified two decades of Fascist rule, the cluded on September 2 betweeli
ratings. Both of these are neces­ mairi office of the ihterriational the Ministry of Labor, Brimcj
bosses, far reaching powers which they would fight to re­ sary and both are being exten­ Transport Workers' Federation Buozzi acting in behalf of the
tain in peace time.
sively used. These men ship feports after receipts of confiden­ Italian labor movement and the
Association of Italian f Industrial­
again and again because they tial information from Italy.
The excuse advanced for passing the bill is the alleged want to, not because there is any The workers' struggle for free­ ists explicitly recognized the res­
manpower shortage and other production bottle necks. To outside power forcing them to. dom centers mainly around the toration of these posts which had
iridustrial cities of Milan, Genoa, beeri suppressed by Mussolini in
begin with, you can't put 7 million men in uniform and
and
Turiri, arid not even German 1926 at -the instigation of the
still expect a labor surplus. Such labor shortage as exists
military
occupation force has same Association of Italian In­
is the result of the war and forced labor isn't going to
been able to halt the workers' de­ dustrialists.
solve it.
The employers, though out­
termined attempts to reestablish
Galveston
$45.66 their former organizations. The wardly conciliatory, evidently
As for the other production bottle necks, the majority S.S. Virginia Dare
20.00 period between the dictator's fall hope to save the Corporation and
of those are directly due to faulty planning, lack of corre­ S.S. Paft York
20.00 and the surrender of the junior Labor fascist charter out of the
lation in letting contracts, allotting raw matetials, manage­ S.S. Walter Ranger
i8.go Axis partner to the Allies was collapse of Fascism and with it
ment inefficiency and (no small point) graft. Forced labor V. D. Dickerson
characterized by a bittea under­ the fascist labor secretaries who
10.00
ground struggle which vented it­ administered the labor provisions
can hardly correct these evils.
S.S. Rupbert Peckham
8.00 self principally in public demon­ in the interest of the employers.
8.00 strations and stay-in strike.s in The workers are determined
. It is undeniable that some areas have more manpower L. White
Ij. Duerschiett
^e.oo the factories. Appeals and threats however, to regain the free ex­
of the Badoglio government prov­ ercise of their democratic tights
^J. Mafvey
ed
equally unsuccessful so that
6.06
labor. But this must be accompanied by the payment of Philadelphia
the Badoglio regime was finally and again .become free trade
6.06 compelled to seek ari understand­ unionists, regardless of the hopes
living wages, of transportation expenses, provisions for Joseph Minagro
D.
Wolczanski
6.00 ing with the wofkers and their of Italy's industrialists and finan­
adequate housing, health protection and recreation.
J. StarikewicZ
5.60 spokesmen.
ciers.

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District

The Labor Draft Bill

Italian. LaboT Rebuilds
Shattered Trade Unions

Honor Roll

But the Austin-WadsWorth bill does nothing to rem­
edy bad housing, poor eating and starvation wages.' It does
nothing but clamp upon labor the muzzle and chain of
slavery.
In reality the backers of the Austin-Wadsworth bill
are less concerned about production schedules than about
smashing labor. They see in this war an opportunity to
settle accounts with their age old enemies—the American
workers.
•TiX- •

Labor should not be fooled by all the window-dressing
designed to make the bill look like a war time measure to
increase the flow of arms to the soldiers. It is a 14 karet
union busting measure, and should be fought as such.

•

....

A,

L. D. Smith
Carlo Colsardo
Third Assistant Eng.
J. Lassister
R. Rae
Ev-NMU member
X. Bertelson
John L. Lloyd
Boston
J. Voliva
M. J. Lyden
C. Starke

4.00
4.00
3.00
3.00
2.00
....... 2.00
. 2.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
. 2.00
... LOO

TOTAL

....$197.00

KELP CLEAR WITH YOUR DRAFT BOARD
By observing the following Simple instructions you will
continue to receive deferment from militaty service. Fail
to observe these rules and you may tvind up in the army.
WHEN SIGNING ON: Give the clerk or skipper all the
information necessary to fill out RMO Card No. 47 .(Grebn v
Card).
WHEN SIGNING OFF; See that Card No. 48 A Is propperly filled out by skipper or clerk.
Ship out before your allotted time ashore has ejqiired.
If you have not yet filled out the Green Card, contact your
draft bukitd diid let them know that you are sailing.

�Friday^ September 24/ 1943

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Three }
sasixi

Around The Ports Florida Branch Agent Reports Progress!
NORFOLK

Throws Successful
After this incident orders were
chaftged and the ship w'ent up Party For Seamen
but the bay tq. Baitimofe to pay off.

In Search For SIU Hall

{Continued front Page 1)
Shipping continues good
So until later that will do fo^
now.
pay-offs have slowed down some­ Several companies have tried
as big as the other one, it will
{Continued from Page 1)
P,S= Just contacted the owner§
what, A Bull Line Liberty ar­ this before but this is the first
rnake a very nice hail for our­
of this building and they teU us
rived here several days ago and time they have actually succeed^ part of the state.
after discharging the usual live ed in discharging all cargo and The gaiig oh the Seatraih were selves, 1 believe that this build­ that this joint is already lease4
ing deserves looking into as I so therefore we must vacate.
cargo, announced that instead of still forcing the crew to stay SO pleased with the way the shin­
dig came off that they are plan­ think it cah be bought and put
paying off here the ship would aboard.
into first class shape at consider­
proceed down the coast and pay The whole thing appears to be ning to hold another in the near
able
saving. When I say first
off there^ Nothing was left a patent effort on the part of the future. The only ones that were
class shape I mean just that.
disappointed
were
those
that
re­
aboard except sand ballast that govef-nfnefital agencies aftd the
Showers, Wash tubs (with a
had been aboard for three trips companies to establish a preced­ ceived invitations and didn't at­
scrubbing board not Washing
tend.
across and back, but the WSA ent whereby they Can keep crews
The crew of the Seatrain de­ machines) proper and decent
and the Company decided to call aboard indefinitely.
serve a lot of credit for thinking toilets, committee rooms, offices
it cargo although three separate
A
Mississippi
ship
came
in
the
up and putting over such a pro­ away from the racket of the men,
crews had been paid off while
other
day
looking
like
a
tele­
gram. if nothing else, they prov­ a library where we can have
Eddie Ford
the same ballast was carried. The
•1
phone
booth
in
distress.
The
Cap­
ed
to the people in this vicinity reading rnaterial at all times, James Vaselakos
ship moved over from Newport
some decent games in a place
John Hamilton
News to the oil dock for bunkers tain had allegedly whipped a guy that the Merchant Seamen are as
with
wire,
the
Chief
Engineer
well-behaved and well-mannered where they can be played, in
Jesse W. Gray—TC 1235
and additional stores and the
other Words just what all you
Maurice Gray—TC-1233
Captain refused any shore leave. had locked another in an ice box as any other group of men in the
old timers who rode from place M. McGovern
Six members of the crew who and in general the whole outfit world.
to place often thought of but
was
haywire.
The
Captain
also
Alfred Lopez
were pretty disgusted went over
The Entertainment Committee
never had. A place where a guy J. Pinir
painted
over
the
side
at
sea
and
was composed of Brothers Wm.
the side and onto a tov/boat after
when he needs it can come and
Rix Naegle
the gangway was in, although did general Work all over the F. Kuschke, Wm. E. Boyd and
clean up, knowing that there is James Brady
ship.
This
would
be
buck
has
Louie Daray. These men worked
they had been advised by the
soap and all the gear on hand. M. Neville
luckily been replaced with an­
for over three weeks to make
unions to stay aboard. They were
The pie'-cards here in New Or­ Lenhardi Eisele
other
skipper
but
be
on
the
look­
this blowout a success, and they
charged with desertion and had
leans
have spent a lot of time L. Chamberland
out
for
him—^His
name
is
ANdid a fine job.
their certificates suspended for
talking this thing over and when C. R. Michael
BREASSON
(no
relation
to
his
Sik months despite a fight put up
Everything was Union, the we do realize on it, we want to
counterpart "Red Lead" Ander
G. Patrice
the union to get them taken
printing of programs and invita­ start something that all the other
son).
A. Brazcnic
back aboard the ship which was
tions was given to a local Union halls can set their sights on and
. MARTY THAINOR, Agent printer, the music was by art or­
Teopesta San Juan
stiU in the stream.
|
try to compete with. We might
chestra from the Miami Federa­ start this haU buying set up here, L. L. Miller
tion of Musicians. Even the beer but the members that I have George Eraser
was Union Made and deliverec talked to are all very enthusias­ Lloyd D. Moullon
by a Union driver. The Master of tic about it and all hands state S. Josephson
Maurice Romans
CM-emonies, althought he is not that it is time that we get our
Leo Garfield
a Union' member, was selected own halls.
Laurence
Kelly
because of his fairness to Union
Estill
Fr_ances
That
hall
in
Wilmington
seems
seamen and also his ability to
Albert Huard
help the people get lined out and to have hit all the boys who have
been on the coast, and when we
Norman Johnson
have
a
good
time.
(After
the
Ohe of the ILA men made a trip to Bermuda on a sea-going tug
third rum and coke they didn't start talking hall they all say,
and when he came back the company informed him the FBI was need any help).
"O.K., let's get ours. What's a
ten
buck assessment now. It will
Keep In Touch With
lobking for him. He showed the FBI that he was not delinquent
repay
itself a thousand fold." Your Local Draft Boccrdy
with his draft board. So they called his draft board and tell them
that this man gave them his change of address. The draft board calls
up the U. S. District Atiorney and so he insists upon seeing him
The FBI men take him over there and they insist that the man was
not delinquent and was not trying to dodge the draft, but the At
torfley tefused to see the man's papers, insisting that he was dclin
qUent. He holds him on $500 bail, and since he couldn't get anyone
Central Registering and Dispatching Office
to bail him out he rested in jail for two days, and was finally in
WASHINGTON — The WLB
Open in SUP Headquarters at San Francisco
ruled that it will not and cannot
dticted into the Navy.
use its powers to nullify decisions
For SIU Members and T. C*s in
The FBI Agents regretted the action of the U. S. Attorney but
of the NLRB, since to do so
there wasn't anything they could do about it. The only action the
Deck, Engine and Steward Departments
would nullify an act of Congress.
tow boat man had was to sue the draft board for false arrest, but
For this reason, the Board unani­
Increased shipping on West Coast by SIU members
he Was disgusted, and took no action against them. Here is the case
mously refused to take jurisdic­
has
made it necessary tp open a separate and complete
of an active seamen having the works put to him, and all the facts
tion of a dispute at the Morenci,
business office to be devoted solely to registering- and car­
in the world was not going to help him. Now at 38, this man is in
ing for the needs of SIU members in all departments.
Arizona, mine of the Phelps
Service because his draft board wanted him there. So brothers,
Dodge Corp., brought up by the
All SIU members in San Francisco are required to im­
doh't feel too secure because you're sailing ships. Keep in touch
mediately register in SIU office at 59 Clay St. SIU members
Clifton Morenci Metal Trades
with your draft board every time you return from a trip, and you'I Council (AFL).
in SUP Branches,on the West Coast are to register in the
save jjourself a lot of headaches.
respective SUP Office and receive an SIU shipping card.
The dispute arose when the
SIU
shipping cards will have preference on SIU ships and
NLRB certified the International
will
be
i^cognized by all SUP Dispatchers. SIU Deck mem­
Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter
bers
will
have second preference when SUP members are
Workers (CIO) as exclusive bar­
The WSA has issued a guide book to all seamen. They must
available.
gaining agent for the approxim­
want to give some of the boys a lesson in geography. Some of them ately 2,000 employees at the mine.
For Further Information:
don't even know where they are when the trip is over, but the The AFL Council contended
WSA wants them to be worldly wise. They have a new USS center that the recent large-scale influx
Call your union offices and tanker organizers at the
ih Trihadad. The beachcombers will be glad to hear about if. They of non-skilled workers into the
addresses listed below. You will always finds somebody at
these numbers excepting at night.
have accommodations for 50 .seamen. It is located at 1 St. Ann's niines gave these workers the
dominant voice over skilled
Road. The stockade in the Persian Gulf is getting filled with U. S.
SEATTLE, WASH.—86 Seneca St.—Phone Elliott 6752.
workers in any industrial bar­
seamen. Those who quit their ships down there are incarcerated gaining unit. Other Phelps—'E. Coester or Johnson.
by the Army and are not allowed to lea/e the stockade until they Dodge mines in Arizona, it alleg­
PORTLAND, OREGON—111 West Burnside St.—Phone
sei ve theif term. So get wise fellows, the union can't help you on ed, have craft units. After the
Beacon 4336—John Massey or C. Atkins.
election, the AFL petitioned the
that beef.
RICHMOND, CALIFORNIA—257 Fifth St.—Phone Rich­
NLRB for reconsideration of its
mond
4021—^Louie Glebe or Banks.
decision and direction of the

Out of the Focs^l
by

JC.

t)

WLB Won't
Nullify NLRB
Past Decisions

ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 7th TO 11th
DEC)K ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL
SHIPPED

320

268

290

888

SeGISTERElD

24^

2l8

' 165

630

election. The petition was de­
nied. In the meantime, the dis­
pute had been certified to the
WLB, and the AFL requested a
public hearing, which was held
August 20, 1943.

Keep In Touch With
our Local Draft Board,

SIU And Tanker Members
On West Coast

VANCOUVER, B. C.—340 B. Cambie St.—Phone Pacific
7824—Hugh Murphy.'
WILMINGTON, California — 440 Avalbn Blvd. — Phone
4449.
NEW YORK CITY — 105 Broad St. — Phone BOwling
Green 9-9530—^Morris Weisberger.
SAN FRANCISCO—59 Clay St.—Phone Exbrook 8229—
Phil donley.

�THE

Page Four

SEAFARERS

Friday, Sepieimber 24, 1943

LOG

Constitional Provisions For Nomination
And Election Of Seafarers Officers
(All Agents: Please clip this page and post it
prominently in the hall for all members to see. This
will eliminate many beefs and misunderstandings
on election procedure.)
ARTICLE XIII
Nomination and Election of
Officers. Atlantic and
Gulf District
Section 1. The regular officers
shall be elected annually and
shall hold office for one year, or
until relieved by their regular
successors in office.

I ^'"Zr

fied candidates for each office ar­
ranged alphabetically with vot­
ing squares to the right of
names; (c) have one blank line
for each office in which member
whose name does not appear up­
on the ballot who must be quali­
fied under the provisions of Sec­
tion 2 of this Article; and (d) be
perforated at the upper edge and
the perforated stubs numbered
consecutively ,beginning with
No. 1. The Secretary-Treasurer
shall cause to be printed, and
shall forward to each Branch
and retain for use at Headquar­
ters, a sufficient number of bal­
lots, and shall keep a record of
the numbers of the first and last
ballots so forwarded and retain­
ed. None but official ballots shall
be used in any general election.

Section 2. Nomination of reg­
ular officers shall be made ht all
branches in the regular meeting
held during the last two meet­
ings in September. Any member
who can qualify may nominate
himsefffor office by submitting,
in writing, accompanied by the
necessary proof of qualifications
listed in sub-sections (a), (b), (c),
and (d), his intentions to run for
office, naming the particular of­
BALLOTING
fice. Such notification to be in
Secretary-Treasurer's office not
Section 4. Balloting for officers
before September 1st, and not shall be secret and shall take
later than October 15th of the place each day during the month
year.
of November and December, 60
Day Referendum provided that
The names and roll-numbers of
there are five members in good
nominees, if obtainable at the
standing elected from the meet­
time shall be recorded in the
ing present to look at their books
minutes. The Secretary-Treasur­
and guard the ballot box; and no
er shall prepare a list of names
ballots shall be accepted except
of nominees for each office and
those cast in the regular manner.
forward copies thereof to each
Branch. Such lists shall be con­
A committee of Election com­
spicuously posted in each qffice posed of six (6) full members in
or hall. All full members shall good standing, two (2) from each
be eligible for any regular office, department, namely one judge,
provided:
two tellers and three clerks, shall
be
elected in each port to con­
(a) That he is a cituen of the
duct
the election and to canvass
United States of America.
the returns. Ballots shall be dis­
(b) That he be a full member tributed in the order of their
of the Seafarers' International numbers, commencing with the
Union of North America, in con­ lowest number.
tinuous good standing for a pe­
Section 5. Members shaU be
riod of six (6) months immedi­
entitled
to vote upon presenting
ately prior to the date of nom­
their
membership certificates
ination.
showing that they are in good
(c) Any candidate for Agent standing, and have not previous­
or joint patrolman must have ly voted at the same election.
three years of sea service in any Members shall mark their ballots
one or three departments. Any with a pen and ink, or indelible
candidate for departmental pa­ pencil, and shall signify their
trolman must have three years choice of candidates by marking
sea service in their respective a cross (X) in voting squares op­
departments. Sea service as spe­ posite names, or by writing in
cified in this article shall mean the blank line the name of their
oh merchant vessels .
choice if such name be not print­
ed upon the ballot. Lead pencils
(d) He has not misconducted
shall not be used in marking bal­
him.self previously while employ­
lots. When a member has mark­
ed as an officer of the Union.
ed his ballot, he shall deliver it
Section 3. A committee con­
folded to the Judge, who, after
sisting of six full book members
ascertaining that the member is
in good standing, two from each
entitled to vote, shall tear off the
department, shall be elected,
numbered stub and deposit the
whose duty it shall be to prepare
ballot. The committee shall then
the ballot.
stamp the member's certificate of
All nommees who desire to bc= membership in the proper column
come candidates shall have the for the year and month of elec­
necessary qualifications and ac­ tion. Such stamp .shall bear the
ceptance in the office of the Sec­ word "Voted," the initials of the
retary-Treasurer or the Commit­ voting place, and the date of the
tee on Candidates prior to the voUng. If the member is not en­
15th day of October of each year. titled to vote ,the Judge shall
Nominees who shall fail to com= cancel and destroy his ballot.
ply herewith shall be regarded The Tellers shall count, the bal­
as having declined the nomina­ lots as they are deposited, and
tion. Ballots shall (a) bear the the clerks shall keep record of
name of the Union, the month the count.
and year of election and instruc­
FORWARDING VOTES
tions to voters; (b) bear the
names of eligible and duly quali­
Section 6. Balloting shall con­

^V'::.

tinue until every qualified voter
present has had an opportunity
to vote. The Judge shall then
count the numbered stubs to
verify the count of the Clerks,
and shall enclose them in a seal­
ed envelope in the baUot-box. He
shall then announce to the meet­
ing, and the Secretary-Treasurer,
or Agent, shall record in the min­
utes, (a) the number of ballots
last distributed; (b) the number
of ballots canceled or destroyed,
and (c) the number of ballots de­
posited. The baUots shall then be
placed in an envelope provided
for the purpose and a slip of pa­
per, also specifically provided,
shall be signed by each member
of the Committee on Election
and pasted on the back of the
envelope. The sealed envelope
shall then be placed in the bal­
lot-box. The ballot-box shall
then be locked and sealed, and
the key thereof shall be sealed
up in an envelope, also speciaUy
provided for that purpose, on the
baick of which each member of
the Committee on Election shall
again sign his name. The envel­
ope so signed and sealed shall be
given in charge of the SecretaryTreasure, or Agent, or some other
member designated by the meet­
ing. No candidate for office shall
be a member of the Committee
on Election.
BRANCH COUNTING
Section 7. In the regular meet­
ing held in Branches during the
first meeting in January, the
mittee on Election shall open the
ballot-box, count the number of
ballots therein contained and
count the number of votes for
each candidate. The result shall
be noted in the minutes. The
Committee shall then forward to
Headquarters all used ballots
(i.e., aU ballots taken from the
ballot-box, including blank and
disqualified ballots), together
with a copy of the tally sheets,
under sealed cover, marked "Bal­
lots for Officers." In case no
regular meeting is held during
such week, the Agent, in the
presence of the Committee on
Election, or, in their absence, be­
fore five
other full members,
shall open the ballot-box and
count the ballots therein contain­
ed (but shall not count and tally
the votes), and forward same to
Headquarters in the manner
hereinbefore prescribed.
H. Q. COUNTING
Section 8. The. Committee on
Election at Headquarters shall
count the number of ballots re­
ceived from each Brsinch and
cast at Headquarters, and shaU
count and tally the votes cast at
each voting place. They shall
prepare a report showing the
number of ballots cast and the
number of votes received by
each candidate at Headquarters
and each Branch, also the total
number of ballots and votes.
They shaU carefully preserve and
place under sealed cover all bal­
lots, keeping separately the bal­
lots cast in each voting place.
Tally sheets shall be kept on file
by the Secretary-Treasurer for
the inspection of members, and
the report of the committee shall
be spread in.fuU upon the min­

utes.. The candidate receiving
the highest number of votes for
any office shaU be declared elect­
ed, and shall assume office within
thirty days after notification. If
the candidate fails to comply
with the foregoing provision, the
office may be declared vacant,
and the Union shaU proceed to
fill the office in accordance with
Article 14, Section 3. Any mem­
ber who desires to be present
during the canvass shall be ad­
mitted upon showing his mem­
bership book in good standing.
INVALID BALLOTS
Section 9. Multilated or disfig­
ured ballots, or ballots marked
with lead pencil, shall be deem­
ed invalid. Ballots torn in such a

manner that part of the names e&lt;
candidates or voting squares is
destroyed are to be regarded as
mutilated ballots. " Where the
choice of any member for any of­
fice cannot be determined with'
certainty, the vote for such of*
fice shall not be counted. This
also applies where a member has
voted for more than the desig­
nated number of candidates to
be elected to any office. AU bal­
lots cast at any time, in any place
and manner, except as herein"
provided, shall be deemed inval­
id.
1
Section 10. All committees
mentioned in Article XIII shall
consist of six fuU book members
in good standing; two members
from each department.

9n Tybunohiam
ARANT, JAMES C

.. Messmari
.. Messmani
Steward
Oilen
O.S.
D|eck Eng.
- — A.Bw
Wipe?
... ^lid Cook
A.B.

BELFORD, ERNEST L.
CHASE, HARRY
COUNCELMAN, CARVILLE
ENGLISH, COY LEE
GENTH, FREDERICK E.
PAVILONIS, JOHN
KROTZER, RALPH P.
WILTZ, EDDIE B
WOOD, FRANK L

MONEY DUE
Ciew of
have $125
Collect 17
ippi Line,

the S. S. Benj. Bourne
attack bonus coming.
Battery Place, Mississ­
New York City.
* ' *
*
Extra meals money coming to
foUowing crew members of S. S.
Woodridge Ferris: J. Davis, J.
Dedicatoria, Fred Williams, Harry
Harris, John Brown, and William
Davis.
«t

«

STANLEY R. YODRIS
Get in touch with Richard M.
Cantor, 51 Chambers Street, Nevr
York City.
•
•
•
ARIE L. PRONK
Your wallet and Coast Guard
pass is at the office of the Secre*
tuy-Treasurer in New York.

«

EARL GILMAN
Overtime iS| coming to foUow­
You have a telegram in the of­
ing crew members of S. S. fice of the Secretary-Treasurer in
Charles Aycock: Paul Huffer, Leo New York City.
Manaugh, J. M. Hughley and A."
»
»
»
Langly.
IRVING PAULSON
Communicate with Richard M&gt;
Cantor, 51 Chambers Street, New
York City.

More U-Boats Sunk
Than Merchant Ships

•

•

•

I

VICENTE VILLACION
WASHINGTON—^Fewer enemy
Your social security card and
U-boats'were at sea during Aug­ union book have been found. Call
ust and shipping losses continued for them at Room 213, 2 Stone
to decrease, a joint announce­ Street, New York City.
ment by the OWI and the British
see
,
Ministry of Information discloses.
BERNARD GOTTHARDT
Your social security card is in
More U-boats were sunk than
Room 213, 2 Stone Street, New
merchant ships.
York City.
»
"It is significant," the Ameri­
BERNARD MICHAEL
can arid British agencies stated,
ROMANOFF
"that the enemy made virtuaUy
Your passes and papers are in
no attempt to attack North At­
lantic shipping, and opportunit­ the office of the Secretary-Trea­
ies for attacking the U-boats have surer, New York City.
» * *
been relatively few. Neverthe­
less, U-boats have been hunted
WILLIAM ASKSON
relentlessly on alj stations wher­
Your book and papers are. beever they have appe^ed and a ing held for you by the Philadel­
heavy toU has been taken."
phia Shipping Commissioner.

•

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PRISONERS OF WAR AND UNIONISM&#13;
NOMINATIONS OPEN; 1944 SEEN AS MOST CRITICAL YEAR YET&#13;
HISTORIC WORDS&#13;
HIGH WAGE MYTH&#13;
FLORIDA BRANCH THROWS SUCCESSFUL PARTY FOR SEAMEN&#13;
AGENT REPORTS PROGRESS IN SEARCH FOR SIU HALL&#13;
MERCHANT SEAMEN STICK TO THEIR JOBS&#13;
UPGRADE SCHOOL FUNCTIONS ARE EXPLAINED BY USMS&#13;
THE LABOR DRAFT BILL&#13;
ITALIAN LABOR REBUILDS SHATTERED TRADE UNIONS&#13;
WLB WON'T NULLIFY NLRB PAST DECISIONS&#13;
SIU AND TANKER MEMBERS ON WEST COAST&#13;
CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS FOR NOMINATION AND ELECTION OF SEAFARERS OFFICERS&#13;
MORE U-BOATS SUNK</text>
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                    <text>Joo
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULP DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL X7NI0N OF NORTH AMERICA
VOL. V.

217

NEW YpRK. N. Y„ FRIDAY. OCTOBER 1. 1943

No. 27

Two More Weeks Left To File
Nominations For Office

U-BOATS BACK
IN ATLANTIC

October 15 is the deadline for nomination for Atlantic and Gulf District
office for 1944. By that date each candidate must have in the office of the Sec­
retary-Treasurer a written notice of intention to run. Any notifications post­
marked after midnight of October 1S will be rejected and the candidate will not
be qualified to run on the official ballot. This rule is laid down by the union con­
stitution and no exceptions can be made to it.

Allied convoys in the North Atlantic are again being
attacked by submarine wolf packs. This was officially con­
firmed this week by the Royal Canadian Air Force which
recently conducted a two-day running battle with the
raiders. The submarines engaged by the Canadian flyers

At branch meetings during the past two weeks many brothers have had their
names placed in nomination for various offices up and down the coast. These
nominations are- not final. Only written notification to the Secretary-Treasurer,
accompanied by the proof of qualification for office, is binding and official.

Follow Up
Your Beefs

All candidates should send their notification by registered mail and should
include, not only formal notification of candidacy, but also discharges proving
the three years sea service as required by the constitution. Candidates for Agent,
or Joint Patrolman can have the thj-ee years in any department. Candidates
for departmental patrolmen must have three years in the indicated department.
Sea time is computed only on merchant ships.
And finally, remember that the constitution requires that all candidates be
in continuous good standing for six months prior to date of nomination. If you
have been in arrears during the past six months, save your and the union's time
and don't file for office.

AFL Plans Political Action;
Post War Problems Discussed
WASHINGTON, D, C. — AFL President William
Green issued a nation-wide call to all affiliated organiza­
tions to get busy at once with plans for political action in
this year's and next year's elections.
Mr. Green c nphasized. that many members of Con­
gress and State Legislatures who^
voted for anti-labor, measures
wiU be candidates for re-election
and should be defeated regard­
less of their political affiliations.
"I am, therefore, addressing to
you this official communication
calling upon all officers and
members of the American Feder­
ation of Labor to begin.prepara­
tions for the political campaigns
oft this" year.^and next year as
well," Mr. Green wrote. "The
full political strength of labor
should be mobilized and united
in support of candidates regard­
less of political affiliations who
are sympathetic and friendly to
labor and in opposition to those
who have shown themselves to
be our enemies and who are un^
sympathetic to labor's legislative
and economic policies. We posi­
tively can defeat our enemies and
elect our friends if we mobilize
'and unite labor's full political ments for voting. T.et all our
strength. We can do this if we membership and its friends reg­
will. The responsibility lies with ister where registration is requir­
us. Let us meet this responsibil­ ed for participation in elections
ity, discharge our duties and pro­ and meet any other legal quali­
tect our membership against in­ fications provided for in our elec­
justice by defeating our enemies tion laws in order to vote. I sug­
and electing our friends to public gest that committees be appoint­
ed by central bodies and local or­
office.
"In order to accomplish this ganizations for the express pur­
result, the Executive Council di­ pose of seeing to it that every
rected me to call upon all mem­ member registers and qualifies
bers of the American Federation for voting and that all members
of Labor to qualify to vote in the go to the polls and vote.
general election by meeting fully "In addition I respectfully sugthe primary and election require{Continued on Page 4)

BOSTON—As the representa­
tives of six million American
workers gathered here in the
lobby of the Statler Hotel await­
ing the convention opening, the
consensus of opinion was that the
American Federation of Labor
and its affiliated unions are now
at peak strength.
The chief issues disturbing the
labor leaders were the failure of
the Government to keep the cost
of living down to the levels at
which wages have been stabiliz­
ed and the alarming effects of
various manpower controls put
{Continued on Pane 4)

' were equipped with heavy antiaircraft armament and chose to
stay on the surface and fight it
out with the planes rather than
dive.

It is important that all crews
follow carefully the progress of
their overtime beefs after they
get in port and hand the beefs
over to the Agents and Patrol­
men. Keep in touch with the
Agent and watch the- LOG so
that you can collect the minute
the beef is settled.
There have been a number of
cases where men give a beef
to a patrolman, then disap­
pear into a gin mill for the pe­
riod of their shore time and ship
out without ever checking on
what was being done to settle
the beef. Then, after a six or
eight month trip these guys blow
into port and demand to know
what happened and why didn't
they get their disputed overtime.
Agents, and Patrolmen in the
majority of SIU ports are greatly
overworked and it is physically
impossible to go around and lead
each crew member by the hand
to the paymaster. If the Agent
wins the beef and then posts the
notice for all to see, it is up to
the men to go and collect it . . .
and promptly! There are very
few cases where the overtime
isn't straightened out within the
period of shore time alloted to
the crew. Collect your overtime
before you ship out again.
Cooperate with your officials
and you'll receive better repre­
sentation.

Bosses And Brass Hats
Push Compulsory Labor
The Austin-Wadsworth "Slave Labor Bill" continued
to be urged upon Congress this week, in spite of publica­
tion in the Congressional Record of statistics disproving the
alleged need for such a bill. The employer and brass hat
sponsors of the bill reveal more openly with each passing
week that they view the measure^
as necessary to their union bust­ shortage was, in reality, a crisis
of poor planning on the part of
ing plans.
management. Artificially created
Contradicting the phoney fig­ production bottle necks, and poor
ures on labor shortages which use of existing labor constitute
had priviously been released by the real problems — problems
Congressional stooges of big which will not be corrected by
business, the Congressional Rec­ enslaving labor.
ord carried the hitherto suppress­
Labor spokesmen have repeat­
ed testimony of Bernard Baruch
before the Senate Military Af­ edly pointed out that what dis­
fairs Committee, as weU as tes­ location of labor supply exists
timony given by James S. Pat- could be easily corrected if man­
ton, President of the National agement would pay decent wages
Farmers Union. Baruch testified and provide housing and trans­
that the so-called manpower portation.

LARGE GUNS
When the subs disappeared
from the sea last spring the gen­
eral opinion was that planes had
made it too hot for them and
that when they returned they
would be fitted with anti-aircraft
guns. This prediction seems now
to have been born out. It appears
from the RCAF report, however,
that the subs are fitted
with
larger guns than was expected.
The RCAF admitted that planes
returned to their bases "fuU of
flak holes through wings, tail and
fuselage." No claims were made
of sinking any subs.
The Canadian planes were pro­
tecting a convoy headed from
the United States to Europe and
containing SIU ships. No report
has yet been received concern­
ing the fate of the merchant
ships. .
SUMMER RECORD
Thus ends the summer lull in
merchant ship sinkings, a lull
which lasted from May through
August, and during which 4,000
Allied ships were convoyed
across the Atlantic with a loss of
less than one-half of one percent.
The engagement between th*
Canadian planes and the sub^
does not necessarily mean that fi
full scale under-water offensivft
is about to be launched against
our ships, but it does show that
the summer absence of subs in
the Atlantic was not" due to any
liquidation of the Nazi fleet.
Rather, it was due to voluntary
withdrawal of the subs in. order
to prepare them for battle witk
the planes.
SACRIFICES AHEAD
Rear Admiral Francis S. Low,
director of the U. S. Navy's op­
erations against the subs, said
over the radio this week that the
German navy was demoralized
and that the Nazis had been
forced to draft U-boat crews. The
low morale reported by the Ad­
miral may be true, but it still
looks as if America's merchant
seamen are due for more bloody
struggles in getting their cargoes
through to the fighting fronts.

In Memoriam
BROTHER

Matthew B. McEttrick
(Cook)
Born April 22, 1889. Died
in Algiers, August, 1943.

.il

- il
I'. IJ;

! ,L- .

�t
THE

l»age Two

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

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

HARRY LUNDEBERG

------ President

110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAVK

------- Secy-Treas,

p. O. BOK 21, Station P., New York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE

-

-

-

Washington Rep.

424 Jth Street, N. W., "Washington, D. C.
•

•

w

Directory of Branches
BRANCH

ADDRESS

PHONE

NEW YORK (4)
2 Stone St
BOwling Green 9-3437
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Cay St
Calvert 4539
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St
...Lombard 765 1
NORFOLK....Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS (16) ..309 Chartres St
Canal 3336
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St
Savannah 3-1728
TAMPA
423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St
Dial 2-1392
PUERTO RICO
45 Ponce de Leon
Puerto de Tierra
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-8043
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway... Ft. Lauderdale 1601

PUBLICATION OFFICE:
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8346

UNIONS VS. MILITARY
What with Coast Guard hearing officers, brass hat port
commanders, gun crew Ensigns and Washington swivil
chair generals, the seamen have come to think that mari­
time labor is the sole object of the military's anti-union of­
fensive. But it's not true. We may bear more than our
share of army and navy anti-labor attacks, but shoreside
workers are also receiving a dose of it.
Take the recent case of plant guards at the Johnsville,
Pa., plant of Brewster Aircraft. These guards were mem­
bers of Local 365 of the United AutomoHle Workers, CIO.
The Coast Guard moved in and said that the guards would
have to join the Coast Guard Reserve for the duration of
the war. The Coast Guard gave assurances that the men
could resign from the Reserve when they wanted to, and
that t^eir rights as union men would not be compromised.
The Union gave the men permission to join the Reserve.
And then it started!
Once the guards were under the authority of the mil­
itary, their received a kicking around. Their seniority
rights were violated and the company management joined
with the Coast Guard in provocations designed to under­
mine the union contract. (Sounds like it happened at sea,
doesn't it?)
The upshot of the thing was that the union called
a strike, the strike was broken, and the plant guards who
believed in and practised unionism and democracy, were
jtbrown in prison.
And now comes the final chapter. On Sept. 27 Assist­
ant Secretary of the Navy, Ralph A. Bard, announced that
henceforth all plant guards would receive "thorough in­
doctrination into the laws" of the Navy so that there would
be no question as to where they owed their "allegiance and
responsibility."
In other words, the Navy will attempt to change the
guards from union men to finks who will club down their
brothers upon the order of a jerk Ensign. Their "allegiance
and responsibility" will not be to their fellow workers and
the economic and political democracy they are at­
tempting to win, but to labor haters who cover their re­
action with the uniform of their country.
Obviously the Navy has the authority and strength
to enforce its program. But it will take more than a show
of gold braid to make union men think as finks—^however
they may be forced to act. And there is a new day coming.
A (lay when the auto workers and the. seamen and all the
other workers who during the past few years have been
provoked and humiliated by their enemies, will settle the
«core and bring the finks and scab herders to heel.

. u-y, _&gt;y.^:.'irr,»,rt •

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, Odiober 1, lt43

Rail Workers Are Merchant Seamen Artists
Double Crossed On To Show Work- In Exhibit
Pay Increase Issue NEW YORK — Merchant sea­ extent of their range in the
men have been invited to submit painters' field,
and provoked,
WASHINGTON, Sept. 28—The original oil paintings, water-col­ very favorable comment from
White House announced today ors, pencil and charcoal sketches many high-ranking artists. Thia
that a railroad emergency board, to the second annual art exhib­ new exhibition therefore becomes
by a vote of 2 to 1, had recom­ ition of merchant mariners of the the instrument of «xpressing one
mended that 300,000 transporta­ "United Nations opening Novem­ of their interests apart from the
tion employes in train and en­ ber 28, 1943, at the Corcoran Gal­ sea."
'
gine service receive a wage in­ lery of Art, Washington, D.C.
crease of 4 cents an hour or 32 &lt;5ash awards, totalling $600, All pictures, Mrs. Peterson
cents a day, instead of 30 per will be made as follows: First added, must have a label pasted
cent or $3 a day as they had de­ Prize, $250; Second Prize, $150; on the back, giving the artist's
name and address; his agent, if
manded.
Third Prize $100, and Five Hon­ any; his rank; his length of ser­
The recommendation precipit­ orable Mentions, $20 each.
ated an immediate crisis in the Honorary sponsors include Mrs. vice at sea; how he became in­
railroad industry, as spokesmen Franklin D. Roosevelt; Arthur terested in art; what his training
for the five unions affected at­ W. Page, vice-president of the was; his future painting plans;
tacked the award, declaring that American Telephone and Tele­ the name of his picture; and itg
price if it is for sale.
it would be rejected unanimous­ graph Company; Colonel David
ly.
Sai-noff, president of the Radio A seaman may enter as many
Although the three members of Corporation of America, and pictures as he chooses.- All pic­
the board agreed that the em­ Consuls of the United Nations. It tures must be submitted, how­
ployes had made out a strong is expected there will be many ever, before October 30, 1943, and
case for a wage increase to cor­ entrants from foreign countries, sent to the Art Exhibition, USS
rect gross inequalities and to aid as well as from all parts of the Andrew Furuseth Club, 30 East
37th Street, New York City.
in the effective prosecution of the United States.
war, they split on the application
"Seamen, not generally re­
The first exhibition of paint­
of this conclusion to the case.
garded as artists, to most people ings by seamen was held by
The majority felt that , under represent the men who carry the United Seamen's Service last Feb^
the limitations of the wage sta­ vital sinews of war to the fight­ ruary at the Hall of Art, New
bilization program they could ing armies,", it was stated by York City; 110 works were hung
not grant more than permitted Mrs. Isabel Peterson, director of by 28 artists, 20 of whom were
under the "Little Steel" formula. recreation at the USS Andrew at sea delivering war goods on
The dissenting member opposed Furuseth Club in New York, February 1, the day the exhibit
this as a narrow interpretation of who has charge of the- exhibit. opened. Art critics had high
the board's authority, saying the "But they also represent men praise for many of the works,
employes were entitled to a lA who have the same interests and some of which were sold by the
per cent wage increase, but hobbies as people in other walks artist to visitors for substantial
should receive at least IVz per of life. Last year's USS art ex­ sums. The first prize winner was
cent for "gross inequity," or 6.75 hibition for seamen proved the SlU Seaman Ben Rosen.
cents an hour. .
UNITED PROTEST PLANNED
General chairmen of the five
operating unions on all the coun­
try's railroads will be convened
within ten days to take action on
the recommendation, now pend­
ing before Fred M. "Vinson, Eco­
nomic Stabilization Director, for
final decision.
Since Mr. Vinson had previous­
The brothers returning from a voyage in the Mediterranean!
ly rejected an award of 8 cents
claim
that torpedo planes are a menace there. The papers are full
an hour made by .another emer­
of
reports
about wolf packs being on the hunt for convoys. So the
gency board to the 1,000,000 nonboys
won't
get much sleep aboard those LIBERTYS from now on.
operating employes, it was learn­
The
slightest
noise at night will awaken the boys from their sleep
ed today that these organizations
without
ringing
an alarm. So fellows, keep a sharp lookout, an&lt;i
would make common cause and
hope you have a safe voyage.
present a united front in an ef­
AAA
fort to upset the two rulings.
Baldy gets married on October 5th to Kay Towers, a registered
One of the outspoken pro­
nouncements of the decision was nurse, and Tommy Thomson is going to be his best man. Baldy
made by David B. Robertson, met the girl through Tommy,, so he's going to make sure he let's
grand chief of the Brotherhood Tommy smell the cork, so he won't think he is the best man in
of Locomotive Firemen and En- reality. "We hope Kay and Baldy have many happy days together,
ginemen.
AAA
"Coming on the heels of the
Talking about marriages, Walter (Slug) Seikmann got married
oversubscription of the recent recently when he was forced to stay ashore by the Coast Guard. He
war loan quota by railroad em­ spent his honeymoon in New Oileans. Many of our members are
ployes, the report and reconi- sailing as licensed officers. Ancy Ackerman is sailing as a 2nd
mendation of the femergency
Mate and Hofert is a 3rd Assistant. Mike Walsh made a trip as 3rd
board on the wage demands of Mate on the STEELORE, and he must like it as we haven't seen
the transportation employes is hipti around the Hall since then. William Lally is in an Army Camp
an insult to their intelligence," on the "West Coast. Blackey Medford and Carl Rogers are around
{Continued on Page 4)
New York quite often. Tony McMunn whose friends were worried
about him, paid off in Philadelphia Recently.
AAA
Elections will soon be here and we wonder how many of these
"militant" brothers will run for office this year. Each year yo'i.,
ANTONIO MERCARDO ....$12,00
hear the brothers gpeak about how many new men are going to
8.00
J. H. LINDSEY
6.00 run for office and what changes they're going to make when they
BOSTON
get into office. The elections come and go and you find out after
5.00
C. SICKLER
4.00 it's all over that the same group of men, with one or two excep- ''
E. ANDERS
S... 3.00 tions, are the ones elected to office. Baltimore makes resolutions
S. S. DELRIO
2.00 why the officers should go to sea every six months. Here's a chance
JOHN MEDVISKY
2.00 for those brothers to get elected and thus force the present incum­
V. MARANO
2.00 bents to go to sea. Come on you beefers, get your credentials into
A. M. HANDS
2.0C Headquarters and make a real fight for the various Agent and Pa­
H. KIRCHSTEIN
1.00 trolmen's jobs.
D.LAWRENCE .
A
A
A
1.00
W. McCRERREY ...
Oscar Grimes had a funny experience. He was in the Bush Ter­
1.00
W. HARDEMAN
1.00 minal Building on 42nd Street, in the Reception Room, when two
J. KANE
1.00 men came in and mugged him out of $575. Fred Stover got hit by
K. C. PITCHER
1.00 a block while aboard a ship and had to have three stitches. "Hop
H. C. ROCK
Along" Cassidy amuses the boys in the Alhambra when he tells
.
$52.00 them that he has to report on the ship at midnight.
- TOTAL'

Out of the Focs^l
by

y. jc.

Honor Roll

N,-'

••.....JA/
--J

�,--,3PV
Friday, October 1, 1943

THE

LIBERTY SHIP ANNIVERSARY
shipyards will have delivered a
greater deadweight tonnage of
new ships than that of the com­
bined pre-Pearl Harbor merchant
fleets of Great Britain, United
States, Germany, Japan, and Nor­
way. There appears to be no
doubt that the fifty-million-goal
will be reached with time to
spare. Shipbuilders reached an
average of better than five de­
livered ships a day in, April 1943
and have continued about that
average. Deliveries in 1943 alone
will total approximately 20,000,BUILDING RECORD
000 deadweight tons and that
tonnage
can be equalled or sur­
Two years ago some 200,000
passed
in
1944.
workers were employed in about
100 ways and in the shops of
^bout 21 yards. Today approx­
imately 750,000 workers are turn­
ing out ships in more than 300
ways in approximately 70 ship­
yards. The ways today are ac­ Following Brothers have money
tually the end stations of a mas­
coming from the Bull Line. Col­
sive assembly line involving 1200
lect
at New York office:
factories in 35 states.
FRANK SWIFT
The wartime shipbuilding pro­
gram calls for the production of
DEBERT SHIELDS
50,000,000 deadweight tons of
FRED LEV^"^
ships by the end of 1944. This
BET^
^ ROLAND
means that from the time the
OTTO PETERSEN
PATRICK HENRY was launched
C. MOWITZ
until the end of 1944, American
In the two years Unce the first
Liberty Ship, the PATRICK
HENRY, was launched, the Uni­
ted States has accomplished the
greatest shipbuilding feat in
tvorld history. It took 151 days
to coinplete the PATRICK
HENRY after her keel was laid,
and she was one of only three
ships completed that month.
IDuring this September 116 ships
will be delivered with an average
delivery time of 45 days from
the laying of iheir keels.

MONEY DUE

SEAFARERSLOG

Page Three '

WHArS DOING

Around the Ports
GALVESTON
Shipping has been good in
Texas ports for the past three
weeks. I have shipped aU the
members that I could get a hold
of. Had to issue 19 trip cards last
week for two new ships out of
the Houston yards. Have a ship
for the Bull Line the end of the
month, also one for the Range
Line the tenth of October. So, if
you want to ship in a hurry get
on down here to Galveston.
The hurricanes are all over.
We had one here again, last
Thursday and Friday, no damage
done. The USS is passing out
money to the wine heads, on the
strength of shipping out and pay­
ing them back. In fact, some of
the characters hanging on the
curb outside of the USS, waiting
in line to get the dough, makes
you think of a Bowery Mission.
The - wiU have the formal open''9th of September, no
one will be there but the NMU
and Lykes Bros. S. S. Co. to rep­

resent the poor seamen. Where
in the hell were these generous
dispencers of easy money when
the seamen really needed help?
We were the scum of the earth
then. No up-town society, or
charity outfit was even interest­
ed in you. Your only friend in
need v/as the eating house, and
the gin mill on the waterfront,
also the flop house. The ship­
owner did not help you or cared
a damn if you ate or had a place
to sleep.
Through union strength we
come into our own, we are mak­
ing more money now than ever
before. The charity fakers, chislers of easy jobs, welfare work­
ers and the shipowner got to­
gether—"We must do something
for the poor seamen, we can get
this easy money from the public
by the heroic deeds that the sea­
man is performing. We will start
up hotels, paying big salaries to
you people who are put in charge
of them."
"After the war the RMO and

the shipowner will do their best
to break up the union, cut wages
so low that the seamen will have
to come to the USS to eat at
sleep. We wiU have to do our
utmost to get the men to work
on the ships. If he won't sail he
cannot come into the USS and
we will have to give the ship­
owner all the help that he needs
to keep his ships rimning. Did he
not give us these easy jobs, big
pay? He donated to keep the
USS ruiming, but he charged it
up to expenses and Uncle Sam
paid for hk donation."
Be on your guard. After the
war the USS will be used by the
RMO and the shipowner for a
scab herding outfit. Keep on the
good side of the small eating
joint, gin mill and flop house on
the waterfront. You will need
them all after the war is over.
E. R. WALLACE. Agent

TAMPA

Shipping for this port is veryslow although we do get a few
calls from Savannah and that
helps the situation some.
Quite a few of the Tampa boys
are coming in every week or so
after having made long trips and
from what they say things are
not as bad as they once were be­
fore the submarine situation was
put under control. Blackberry
Evans has accepted a second as­
sistant job on one of the Bull
Liners in the longhorn state. He
left by boxcar yesterday after­
noon. Believe it or not Admiral
Blinkie Roberts has accepted a
position with the McCloskys Ship
yard. I am sure that he will stay
with them for the first payday
anyway.
Well, the time has come for
the nomination of the officials
for the coming year. I have
heard so damn many growls and
beefing about the officials that
are in office now, I am getting
grey headed. For the benefit of
those that do the most growling
and the least work for the union's
benefit, they will now have a
chance to nominate some one for
office that will suit them. And
furthermore, I would like to see
some of those birds run for of­
fice in order that they may see
what an official has to contend
with .
They don't realize that an or­
dinary seaman with no experi­
ence of any kind will make more
money than even the SecretaryTreasurer and we don't have a
chance for a raise in pay. When
the living conditions goes up we
have to pay just the same.- It is
damn hard to live ashore on
$60.00 per week and more so
when you have a family to take
care of. Oh well, things will ad­
just themselves in the long run
I suppose.
You brothers who have made
a long trip and want a vacation,
come on down to Tampa where
the climate is nice and warm and
the gals hot and beer is cold.
The fishing is good, as Brother
Steely White can tell you. He
has been very successful with the
organizing of the fishermen so
far. Everything is going smooth
and they are all working again
with a better price for their
catches.
D. L. PARKER, Agen|

1 .i,.

- v.:

CI •

�THE

Page Four

SEAFA RE R S

'^•;
Friday. October 1, 1943

LOG

AFL Plans Political Action; ^Jtom. JhsL 3fab&amp;i, (pAMA. —
Why Some Workers Are "Against" Unions
Post War Problems Discussed
Many workers who think that
they are "against" unions believe
that they came to that conclusion
all by themselves. Very few
workers realize that among all
the weapons which employers
use against unions, one of the
strongest is a subtle manipula­
tion of public opinion. If they
can persuade their workers to
fight the union for them, then
their battle is won.

AFL POLITICAL
DELEGATES ARE CONCERNED
ACTION PLANNED
WITH PEACE EMPLOYMENT
which are now being challenged
{Continufi from Page 1)
in the courts.
into effect by the Government.
A growing demand was openly
For the first time since the war
expressed for prompt and decis­ began, interest was being dis­
ive action by the Government to played by the delegates in post­
bring prices of the necessities of war plans. Reflecting the assur­
life back into equitable relation­ ance that eventual victory for
ship with the wage income of the United Nations is now cer­
workers. A tthe same time, op­ tain, the delegates voiced deep­
position to any form of compul­ ening concern over the effects of
sory labor draft was gathering peace upon industrial activity. ,
From their conversations, it
momentum.
These and many other vital can be said that the union repre­
national issues of particular in­ sentatives believe the only way
terest to labor will be presented to avert a major depression with
to the convention, debated, and serious unemployment after the
voted upon. The policies decided war is to prepare now for a largeupon by the convention will scale peacetime production pro­
guide the American Federation gram which can be put into op­
of Labor during the coming year. eration as soon as the fighting
The fact that the Connally- ends.
Most of the delegates arrived
Smith Act has been thoroughly
discredited during its brief pe­ early in Boston to attend the de­
riod of existence provided cheer­ partmental conventions- which
ing news for the convention, serve as a prelude for the AFL's
which will unquestionably de­ annual conclave. Unusually large
mand that Congress repeal this attendance was reported at the
vicious anti-labor law at once. meetings of the AFL Metal
Strong disapproval was express­ Trades Building Trades and
ed of the effects of anti-labor Union Label Trades annual meet­
laws adopted in several States, ings.

RAIL WORKERS ARE
DOUBLE CROSSED
ON PAY INCREASE
{Continued from Page 2)
Mr. Robertson said. "I predict
that it is the straw that will
break the back of the unfair and
inequitable wages and prices
camel of the Government.
"We will arrange to convene
the general chairmen of our
brotherhood on all the railroads
of the country to refer this unfair
recommendation to thwn for
consideration."
T. C. Cashen, president of the
Switchmen's Union of North Am­
erica, said the award was "an
insult" and would be rejected.
H. W. Fraser, president of the
Order of Railway Conductors,
Said that it was "unsatisfactory
fn every sense of the word."
Alvanley Johnston, president
of the Brotherhood of Locomo­
tive Engineers, said:
"I am very much disappointed
In the recommendation. It did
not even come within, the 'Little
_ Steel' formula. The men will no
doubt be very dissatisfied."
A. F. Whitney, . president of
the Brotherhood o f Railway
Trainmen, declared that the em­
ergency board "permitted itself
to exercise no judgment but
frankly arrived at a figure me­
chanically," so that the efforts
and money expended by the
brotherhoods to present a com­
prehensive view of the issue were
wasted.

Ife-

"The board might just as well
have availed itself of easily ob­
tainable statistics as to have
gone through the farce of hold­
ing extensive public hearings,"
he said.

'J;&gt;

Keep In Touch With
Your Local Draft Board,

{Continued from Page 1)
gest that the records of Members
of Congress and of State legisla­
tures which show the way they
voted in favor of anti-labor legis­
lation or against it, be examined
and studied. Candidates for elec­
tion to Congress and state legis­
latures should be called upon to
state in positive terms their at­
titude toward labor, labor's leg­
islative policies and labor legis­
lation. Let us in this way pre­
pare now for the great political
battles of 1943 and 1944. Through
such preparation we cannot fail
to win decisive victories for la­
bor."

L. W. Beeby—No. 3167
E. J. Nooaan-™.TC 1232
James Reaves—^No. 22963
Joe H. Boyle
I. Rodriguez—^TC 149

The 13th Street Commandos
We're the 13th Street Commandos,
The blood lusts in our eyes;
For the sake of Dugashvilli
We shout, let's do and die.
Our fierce yells for a 2nd front
Are heard on every side.
Wherever we find a soapbox
Or with an inkpot bide.

A

^

_

WHEN WORKERS WANT IT
—THEY GET IT!
Company union and lockout
are methods which are more out
in the open. These are so openly '
abusive in their intent that they
are pretty easily identified be­
fore the National Labor Relations
Board.
Yet workers usually find that
their worst enemy in the shop is
themselves. The hard step is
finding out the facts and then
having the courage to go all out
for the union.
Once that happens, the boss
might as well throw all his tricks
out the window. When workers
really want union, then nothing
can stop them!
—The Advance

-^fXSCVtfiis

Rollback Looks
Like "Goldbrick"

"

In Union Halls which wie control
Great is our hue and cry.
With expulsion facing all members
Who dare to question — WHY?

&gt;

'

Earl Browder, Foster, Minor—
These are our Chiefs of Staff,
Superiors of Allied Generals
And don't y&lt; u dare to laugh.

'

And Curran, Stein and Meyers,
These top the Navy too;
These are our Maritime braintrust
And don't you dare say—^phew.
From an easy chair they see it all,
We know our Soviet need,
And the orders from Stalin's grapevine
Must see us act with speed.

-

B. HAMALIAN
Your papers are in headquart­
ers office.
PATRICK SULLIVAN
Your discharges are in head­
quarters office.
JACOB DAGART, Jr.
Your receipts are in headquar­
ters office.
LESLEY TAYLOR
Issac McCants has left money
for you in the office of the New
York Agent.
*
»
»
STANLEY R. YODRIS "
Get in touch with Richard M.
Cantor, 51 Chambers Street, New
York City;
•

a-,

When ships go down, it don't hurt us.
We just unroll our map
And talk another rousing fight.
Or go to tea — mayhap.

•

•

Workers who may have ta­
ken at face value ah O.P.A.
promise to roll back the cost
of living by 2.3 per cent are
going to be ''sadly disappointed.
Chester Bowles, O.P.A. gen­
eral manager, said the cutback
would be achieved by reduc­
ing prices on apples, onions,
potatoes, oranges, lard, short­
ening and peanut butter.
Labor research men analy­
zed his figures and the result
was an eye-opener. Boris
Shishkin, A. F. of L. econo­
mist, concluded the announced
reductions wouldn't roll back
living costs more than 1 per
cent.
The O.P.A. program rolls
back the cost of living index
faster than it rolls back the
cost of living.

ARIE L. PRONK
Your wallet and Coast Guard
pass is at the office of the Secretciry-Treasurer in New York.
• *
*
VICENTE VILLACION
EARL GILMAN
Your social security card and
You have a telegram in the of­ union book have been found. Call
fice of the Secretary-Treasurer in for them at Room 213, 2 Stone
New York City.
Street, New York City.
» » »
IRVING PAULSON
WILLIAM ASKSON
Communicate with Richard M.
Your book and papofs are beCantor, 51 Chambers Street, New ing held for you by the PhiladelYork City.
Iphia Shipping Commissioner,

But others shall do the fighting.
Shall do the sailing too;
We must remain at home, well paid
To tell you what to do.
,\^

»

"
^

',

The workers pay for our efforts.
Their dues keep up in trim.
Some lose-their lives but we go on
And W increase our din.
We're the 13th Street Commandos
There's blood lust in our eye.
But don't suggest that we ship out
And don't dare wonder "WHY?"

The boss has many other effec­
tive weapons with which to fight
the union.
Favoritism, for example — the
old, smooth formula of "divide
and conquer." It has worked just
as well for many an anti-union
boss as it has for Hitler. If all
the workers are competing
against each other for the boss'—
or the forelady's—good opinion,
then that boss and forelady have
no need to worry that there will
be any talk of union.
Intimidation—how subtle, how
undercover it can be. Sometimes
it consists of nothing more than
just a "hard look"—and yet the
worker knows very, very well,
what is meant by it. Intimida­
tion doesn't have to be put into
words to be effective.

If you recently joined the
union you perhaps can remember
back to the old days, before you
really knew about unions, when
you too were persuaded that
there was something "bad" about
them. If you try very hard you
ought to be able to figure
out
just where you got the idea that
unions were altogether bad. Was
it an article in a local paper?
Was it a forelady who just show­
ed by her attitude that she had
no use for anyone who belonged
to a union? Perhaps the boss
made a friendly-seeming speech
to you sometime in which he just
took it for granted that none of
the workers in his happy family
would ever think of getting mix­
ed up with anything so horrid as
a union.
Propaganda? Of course — and
very often we are surrounded by
it and affected by it without ever
realizing that it exists. Later on,
when your eyes are really open­
ed, it's possible to see how this
combination of little things—
words and phrases and sentences,
sometimes only half-said, ^ies
and haK-truths — warped, your

„ '
,

'

We are the armchair Generals,
We are the Admirals too;
No sacrifice is too great for us
And crimson is our hue.

Worn out by strenious labors
From shouting, word and pen.
We then take our vacations
To make us fit again.

WHO TOLD YOU SO?

opinion.
SOME ANTI-UNION TACTICS

•

»

I

ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 13th TO 18th
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL

,

,

f

SHIPPED

334

271

286

891

REGISTERED

270

212

170

652

—Top An' Lift

I
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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
TWO MORE WEEKS LEFT TO FILE NOMINATIONS FOR OFFICE&#13;
U-BOATS BACK IN THE ATLANTIC&#13;
FOLLOW UP YOUR BEEFS&#13;
AFL PLANS POLITICAL ACTION; POST WAR PROBLEMS DISCUSSED&#13;
BOSSES AND BRASS HATS PUSH COMPULSORY LABOR&#13;
RAIL WORKERS DOUBLE CROSSED ON PAY INCREASE ISSUE&#13;
MERCHANT SEAMEN ARTISTS TO SHOW WORK IN EXHIBIT&#13;
UNIONS VS. MILITARY&#13;
LIBERTY SHIP ANNIVERSARY&#13;
AFL PLANS POLITICAL ACTION; POST WAR PROBLEMS DISCUSSED&#13;
WHY SOME WORKERS ARE "AGAINST" UNIONS&#13;
THE 13TH STREET COMMANDOS&#13;
ROLLBACK LOOKS LIKE "GOLDBRICK"</text>
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                    <text>AMERICAN LABOR
FACES SLAVERY

at

OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
^ SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OP NORTH AMERICA
VOL. V.

267

NEW YORK. N. Y.. FRIDAY, OSTOBER 15. 1943

No. 28

The Austin-Wadsworth Bill now pending in Congress
is another milestone in the march toward darkest reaction,
and possibly even fascism, in this country. Just as the
Smith-Connally bill, passed last year by Congress, was
aimed at smashing the unions and depriving the working

BE KIND TO
WAR PROFITEERS
DEPARTMENT

WHAOOYA M6AN - TAia

tne pROFits sal OF IVAR'T
FISOM W»KR€^Vool«iMK^
TAKIMG 'EM f/r

DENVER. Oct. 2—Frank­
est statement of the month
for big business apologists of
war profiteering came this
week from Chairman Maur­
ice H. Karker of the War
Dept. pri&amp;e adjustment board,
which handles renegotiations
of war contracts.
According to the Nat'l
Union Farmer. Karker told a
meeting of the Associated
Industries in Cleveland re­
cently that:
"In reaching a conclusion
in renegotiation proceedings
we allow an adequate mar­
gin of profit, plus a margin
of generositey. plus a mar­
gin for good measure. No
manufacturer can say the
plan is anything but fair."

Ten Allied
Ships Lost
To U-Boats

f

if

• i

li

—The Call

A pack of U-boats, believed to
have used a new and deadlier
type of torpedo, followed two
Canada-bound convoys "like a
school of sharks" for ten days
last month and sank ten and pos­
sibly eleven Allied vessels, in­
cluding three warships, surviv­
ing seamen disclosed.
Naval authorities described
Germany's .new type of torpedo
as combining magnetic guidance
with acoustic detonation.
Fired at a ship from astern the
torpedo overtakes the vessel and
explodes within the radius of the
ship's propeller vibration. The
{Continued on Page 3)

ROBIN LINE SHIP REVEALED
AS A SUPER-BELLY ROBBER
It's More Ice For Labor Freeze

class of its rights, so the AustinWadsworth bill is another blow
at labor and is sponsored by
those employer elements who
will only be satisfied when it be­
comes a statutory offense to join
a trade union.
Labor lost the fight on the
Smith-Connally bill because the
Congress was dominated by
stooges for Big Business. It is
the same Congress which now is
considering the Austin - Wadsworth "Slave Labor" Act, and
the chances of its passage ap­
pear good.
Whether or not this bill is
passed, however, it is certain
that this Congress wiU continue
to attack labor, in word and act,
and the utmost vigilance is need­
ed to protect our remaining
gains. In the long run it is only
the reconstitution of Congress
(electing men who wear a union
label) which will protect labor
from these attacks. But in the
mean time, every worker must
become familiar with the provis­
ions of the Austin-Wadsworth
Bill and prepare to combat it
with all possible weapons.
PROVISIONS OF THE BILL
(1) Every man 18-65 and every
woman 18-50 must register.
(2) The President is empower­
ed to determine the number of
workers needed in any essential
"industry, in agriculture, or in
any occupations, activities or
employment," to designate the
purpose for which they are
needed, to specify quotas, quali­
fications of the persons selected
and the places to which they are
assigned.
(3) Local draft boards select
the individual workers.
(4) The bill includes provisions
that:
a there is "due regard to as­
signing the workers near
their homes"
b "reasonably suitable" housr'"
ing accomodations are avail­
able
c aptitude tests and training
are given "as far as it is
practicable"
d transportation is provided
e transported workers receive
the compensation and work
the hours required in the
place of his new employ­
ment, the newly assigned
workers are not obliged to
join any existing organiza­
tion or union.
(5) Assigned workers are en­
titled to restoration of like sen­
iority and pay at the end of the
war "unless employers' circum­
stances have so changed as to
make such restoration impossible
or tmreasonable."
(6) Refusal or failure to comply
with any lawful orders issued
under this act are punishable by
a fine of not more than $1,000,
six months imprisonment, or
both.

By JOSEPH FLANAGAN
A Robin Line rust bucket ar­
rived at this fair port with its
usual volume of beefs. However,
the main issue was the food sit­
"Workers in the New York area were virtually hog-tied to their jobs this week
uation.
under a series of new regulations handed down by Mrs. Anna M. Rosenberg, regional
When the excuse for a ship
director
of the War Manpower Commission. While the freezing rule applies only to the
arrived, we received an SOS
from one of the delegates metropolitan area, it is understood that Paul McNutt will issue similar regulations for
to come down to her at the rest of the country's production area.
once as about 10 of the crew The program introduces three•
were sick from eating bad food. principal changes in existing reg­ 4. Workers can not be hired once again that once labor joins
by any employer if they have these phoney boards, it becomes
We preceded to the ship and ulations:
not
lived in the city or surround­ the captive of the governmentsure enough at least that many 1. Employes who quit their
ing
"commuting area" for the boss alliance.
complained that their systems jobs in "essential jobs" without
preceding
month. This prevents
were on the fritz due to the rot­ obtaining formal release from
workers
from
moving to a differ­
ten grub they had eaten during the boss, cannot be hired by any
An Apology
ent
city
in
order
to better their
the major part of the trip. The new employer for two months.
conditions—even if they get a job
engineers and mates also were This is only a step short of Mus­
J. L. has asked the LOG to
in
"essential work."
very loud in their denunciation solini's old fascist regulation that
apologize to Brothers Casof the food situation. When the such a worker c.ould not be re­ Thus, while the Austin-Wads- sidy. Grimes and Rogers for
worth "slave labor" bill is being any embarrassment that may
Captain was questioned about employed at all.
fought
in Congress, the War
2. Workers in "essential jobs"
the issue he denied all, stating
have been caused to them by
Manpower
Commission is pro- the appearance of their names
all food on his ship was of first can not shift to "non-essential
grade quality, and that he would jobs" without written approval ceding to put many of its worst
in the column "Out of the
not allow any other food to be of the government. No matter features into effect by simple Focs'l" on October 1.
put aboard his ship. We then how bad the pay and working ukase.
J. L. assures these brothers
WHAT THE BILL MEANS
preceded to investigate the conditions, the worker is tied to The really criminal part of the that any association of names
whole
preceding
is
the
fact
that
the
profiteering
employer.
whole issue, and dug up some
was entirely accidental, and
(1) Conscription to work for a
3. Hiring of any workers en­ labor's representatives helped in
very interesting facts.
his only motive was to report
private employer making his pri­
The company posted a ration gaged in any of the list of 149 drawing up the rules; these hav­ news which he thought
vate profits—slavery as defmed
list on the .bulletin board stating critical occupations is - permitted ing been OK'd by the "Laborwould be of interest to the
by the Supreme Court.
only with the written consent of Management Committee" for this membership.
the War Manpower Commission. area. Which only goes to prove.
{Continued on Page 2)
{Continued on Page 3)

^2

�•vrwy.vr'

Page Two

THE

SEAFARERS LOG
'Published by the

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

HARRY LUNDEBERG

------ "President.

110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif. .

JOHN HAWK

Secy-Treas.

P. O. Box 25, Station P., New York Qty

MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Rep.
424 5 th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C,
•

w

Directory of Branches
BRANCH

ADDRESS

PHONE

NEW YORK (4)
2 Stone St
BOwHng Green 9-3437
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Cay St
Calvert 4539
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St
Lombard 765!
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI...
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS (16) ..309 Chartres St
Canal 3336
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St
.Savannah 3-1728
TAMPA
423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St
Dial 2-1392
PUERTO RICO
45 Ponce de Leon
,Puerto de Tierra
GALVESTON
219 20lh Street
Galveston 2,6043
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway... Ft. Lauderdale 1601

PUBLICATION OFFICE;
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwUng Green 9-8345

AMERICAN LABOR
FACES SLAVERY

SEAFARERE

LOG

Friday, October 15, 1943

;^ifR€POT?T orv.
^ASHItXGTOIV:
• av MATT44ftW DUSUAN&amp;«

I attended the SIU's executive on merchant marine and fisher­ and a union and the employe?
board aimual meeting in -San ies. Haven't had the time to agree to a wage rate for AB's at
Francisco, results of the prdceed- thoroughly check these biUs — $125.00 per month, this new wqge
ings will be submitted to the will forward all bills to the re­ rate would be alsove the mode
membership by your respective spective HQ of the SIU affiliates. for the industry, and under ex­
secretary-treasurers.
ecutive order No. 9328 the board
The following bills have been MARITIME PANEL MEETING cannot grant approval of the
introduced in Congress, aUd hear­ Attended a conference of pan­ agreement.
ings are scheduled for October el memljers of the War Shipping Should any employer pay S
Panel — (Maritime Panel of the wage rate above the mode, and
12, 1943.
War
Labor Board); The National they hold government contracts
HR.3257 — To amend subtitleWar Labor Board approved of all or are agents for the government
Insurance of title II of the mer­
chant marine act, 1936, as amend­ but three of the voluntary agree and pay any wages that are
ments that the panel recom­ above the mode and the agree­
ed, to authorize suspension of the
mended approval in the meetings ments are not approved by the
statue of limitations in certain
that were held on August 16, 17, War Labor Board, the employer,
cases, and for other purposes.
and 18th.
would not be able to collect from
The purpose of the bill is to
The
three
cases
that
the
board
the
government on any payments
affirm and clarify the authority
did
not
take
action
on
involved
that
he may have made.
of the WSA; to agree on a waiver
the MM&amp;P and the MEBA. The
That
is the club that the War,
of the statue of limitations in
board
recommended
that
a
com­
Labor
Board
holds over the em­
connection with claims arising
mittee
from
the
Panel
have
a
ployers'
head
when he makes an'
from insurance agreements in
conference with Mr. Vinson, sta­ agreement with a union. If they
cases of missing vessels, in order
to provide prompt settlement of bilization director, to discuss the do not comply with the rulings
possibility of him granting tem­ and dijjectives of the board, and
30th marine risks and war risks
porary approval of the agree­ executive orders, they are not
involved.
ments pending the outcome of reimbursed by the government
NO DOUBLE RECOVERY
the present negotiations of the for any expenditures that they
HR.3258—^To prevent recovery MM&amp;P-MEBA and the employ­ make as per the terms of their]
on claims under section 1 (a) of ers for a uniform agreement.
agreements.
public law No. 17, seventy-eight
A committee from the panel
The agreements in question,
Congress, relating to -seamen em­ call for increases above what is had an appointment with Mr.
ployed by the United States termed the mode. Under execu­ Vinson yesterday afternoon, and
through the War Shipping Ad­ tive order No. 9328, the board the case is now back in the lap
ministration.
cannot approve of the agree­ of the National War Labor Board
The purpose of the bill is to ments without the approval of for action. The board did not
limit the possibility of double or Mr. Viii.son.
want to act on this case with]
over lapping recovery on account
having a conference with Mr.
WAGE FREEZE
of death or injury to seamen as
Vinson, due to the fact that the
employes of the U. S. by the For the information of the new wage schedule is above the
WSA. The possibility of such membership, I'll try and explain Mode. It now remains to be
overlapping recovery arises in what is meant by the mode. It seen what action the board will
cases of seamen who are entitled is the most frequent rate of take on this case, their decision
to sue under the law of the U. S, wages paid in any locality or in­ may set a precedent under the
in case of death or injury and dustry. For instance, if the ma­ 'RARE AND UNUSUAI. CASE"
may also be entitled to sue under jority of the AB's receive a clause in executive order No.
foreign law on account of the monthly wage of $100. per month 19328.
same casualty.

is the only method of getting the
'{Continued from Page 1)
American people to work in oc­
(2) American citizens give up
cupations essential to the war
their right to choose the work,
the place they live in and the effort.
condition under which they AUSTIN-WADSWORTH BILL
WON'T SOLVE THE PROBLEMS
work.
(3) Capital and industry are It does not accomplish its
left free to act as they wish—un- stated purpose to "provide for
the successful prosecution of the
conscripted.
, ^
war."
It assumes that the only
(4) Possible injustices:
hindrance to further increase in
a to Negroes—Southern draft production (which has more than
UNIFORM INSURANCE
boards can easily use their doubled since 1939) is a man­
HR.3259—To
clarify the appli­
power to bind the Negroes power shortag-. This does not
cation
of
section
1 (b) of public
even more firmly to the soil get at the basic causes which
law
No.
17
seventy-eight
Con­
or to their underpaid jobs
are:
gress, to certain services per­
i) to minorities—individuals of
(1) lack of overall planning:
formed by seamen as employes of
unpopular opinions' can be
a improper allocation of raw the U. S., through the War Ship­
threatened with removal for
materials, so that some plants ping Administration. This week witnessed the spec­ four other states have similar
expression of their opinions
have an over-abundance and
tacle
of a labor leader being repressive laws.
The purpose of the bill is to
others maintain their em­ exclude from consideration for flung into jail because he urged
c to all citizens—loss of voting
When Thomas announced he
ployees idle through lack of the puiposes of old age and sur­ workers to join - a union. This was to speak at the Texas rally
privileges until a new resi­
material
dence is established
vivors insurance benefits, services didn't happen in Hitlerland, but on behalf of the right to organ­
b
concentration
of
75%
of
war
ize, which is guaranted by Fed­
of seamen employed as employes deep in the heart of Texas."
(5) A tremendous setback to
contracts
with
100
large
cor­
eral
statues. Attorney General
R.
J.
Thomas,
president
of
the
of
the
U.
S.,
by
the
WSA,
on
for­
the improved working conditions
porations
causing
many
Gerald
Mann rushed into court
United
Automobile
Workers,
was
eign
flag
vessels
or
contracted
of the past 15 years through:
small businesses to fail, and for and performed wholly out­ the victim of this startling inva­ and got an injunction to "gag"
a forcing transferred people to
creating unnecessary short­ side the U. S., so that coverage sion of civil rights. AU he did Thomas unless he secured a li­
work under any conditions
ages of labor in specific for such benefits for seamen em­ was speak at a rally in Pelly, cense.
existing in their assigned
areas
Thomas replied that he didn't
ployes of the WSA shall be in Texas, an oil-producing center,
occupation
(2) no real statement of the line with the coverage in cases and make this plea:
think he should be compelled to
b a blow to the democratic neds of the armed forces in re­ of similiar services by seamen
"I earnestly ask those who obtain a license to exercise hia
trade union movement by lation to the available man­ employed by private shipping
are
not now members of the constitutional rights.
transfer of militant union power.
READY TO FACE ISSUE
operators.
Oil Workers' International
leaders to other jobs
(3) failure to use large groups HR.3262—^To amend section 2 Union to join now."
"I didn't come here to violate
any law," he said. "But since the
c the destruction of unions of available manpower.
(b) of public law No. 17, seventy(4) failure to remedy the bad eight Congress—^relating to func­ As soon as he finished, deputy issue has arisen I don't want
where membership mainten­
sheriflfs "nailed him" anci hauled anybody to say I'm evading it."
ance clauses and union shop housing, transportation, etc., in tions of the WSA, and for other
him off to the Travis county
Thomas declared bluntly he
agreements exist becau.se of war areas which create or inten­ purposes.
lockup. In double-quick time.
sify
labor
shortages.
would
speak and thus test the
the fact that new workers
The purpose of the bill is to County Judge J. Harris Gardner
would not be obliged to join
expressly authorize the waiver sentenced him to three days' im­ validity of the Texas act.
JVeiv Orleans Mailing of recovery of seamen's insurance prisonment and a $100 fine. How­
any existing labor union.
payments by the WSA, particu­ ever, he was later released on
(6) Break up of the home
Address
larly in cases where insurance bond, pending a trial on his ap­
^ough:
All mail for union brothers has been paid to beneficiaries on peal, October 20.
a one member of the family
Following Brothers have money
in
New Orleans should be ad­ the assumption that the missihg
moving to another area
VICIOUS
coming from the Bull Line. Col­
seamen
were
dead,
but
were
la­
dressed
in
the
following
man­
b complete readjustment for
ANTI-UNION LAW
lect at New York office:
ter found to be alive. The bill
the whole family if it moves ner:
AHr of this arose because the
FRANK SWIFT
i
follows
a
similiar
provision
with
John
Doe
together.
DEBERT SHIELDS
f j
respect to recoxrery of benefits Lone Star state has a vicious
General
Delivery
(7) The proponents of the bill
FRED LEWIS
f !
paid by the veterans administra­ anti-union law which, among
Seamen's Postal Unit
Imply that the imdemocratic
other features, specifies that no
BERNARD BOLi^D
"i
tion.
Custom
House
Station
jtaettiod of coercion by the state
OTTO PETERSEN
"I
The analysis on the above bills one may seek to organize work­
New Orleans 16, La.
Kather than consent by the people
C. MCWITZ
jrj
was prepared by the committee ers without a license. At least

Texas Jails Labor Leader
When He Talks Of Union

MONEY DUE

m
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|,V' '

.-A

�'Hi

,-5, v

Fujida^' Ocl^r 15, 1943

THE

Robin Line Revealed
Super-Belly Robber

,1:'

jgood: 20 cases of eggs, 400
'{Continued from Page 1)
lbs. frozen beef, 200 lbs. corn­
Governmejit that v.'hcn the chief
ed shoulder, 170 lbs. frank­
steward of ship put in his requis­
furters. 100 lbs. ox livers, 200
ition for stores, every item on his
lbs. veal, 175 lbs. sausages,
list was cut at least 50% and
268 lbs. chickens, 100 lbs.
some as high as 80% by the com^
ducks,
and 75 lbs. turkeys.
pany purchasing agent. Steward
With regard to the first three
notified company before ship
items listed above, the exact
Bailed that some of the stores
quantities are questionable,
iaboard the ship were unfit fQ£.
consumption. This was ignored as some of these may be sal­
vaged.
by the company, and the prize of
Respectfully yours,
them all was a letter to the com­
K. Gunderson,
pany from the Captain which
Master,
S.S.
specified the food was unfit to
To top this, the new stores
eat.
they
took aboard were also of
This letter was signed by the
such
poor
quality and far less in
same Captain who made the
quantity
that
the food that had
statement his ship carried noth­
to
be
disposed
of, that the crew
ing but first grade food.
almost starved for the rest of the
Here is a copy of the skipper's trip.
letter:
To further their aim towards a
Seas Shipping Company, Inc. quick demise for the crew, the
chief engineer of said ship shut
39 Corllandt Street
off all the fresh water, and let
New York, N.Y.
, Aiij Mr. P. P. Lanning,
the crew drink some kind of
blackish salty water for ten days.
Operating Manager
I advised the entire crew^o have
Dear Sir:
a thorough examination from a
Please be advised that we doctor as soon as they possibly
found it necessary to pur­
could. I hope this advice was
chase potatoes and yeast in taken seriously.
Trinidad; the former because
As a final suggestion to the
more than 50% of those ob­ crews of these ships where a ra­
tained in Norfolk were no tion system has been imposed by
good (see letter dated June
the company, the War Shipping
7); the later because the 32 Administration has ruled the ra­
lbs. on hand from the last tion system as proposed by them
voyage were useless. The was to become effective only
when the ships were in areas
steward ordered 40 lbs. of
yeast in Norfolk, but all he where food was unobtainable.
Also the provisions therein were
received was 10 lbs.
In addition, the following based on the minimum and not
the maximum allotment per
items on hand from last voy­
age were found . to be no man. Stewards take notice.

SIU And Tanker Members
On West Coast

•

»

U

Central Registering and Dispatching Office
Open in SUP Headquarters at San Francisco
For SIU Members and T, C's in
Deck, Engine and Steward Departments
Increased shipping on West Coast by SIU members
hyas made it necessary to oi&gt;en a separate and complete
business office to be devoted solely to registering and car­
ing for the needs of SIU members in all departments.
All SIU members in San Francisco are required to im­
mediately register in SIU office at 59 Clay St. SIU members
in SUP Branches on the West Coast are to register in the
respective SUP Office and receive an SIU shipping card.
SIU shipping cards will have preference on SIU ships and
will be recognized by all SUP Dispatchers. SIU Deck mem­
bers will have second preference when SUP members are
available.

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Three

Ten Allied Around The Ports
Ships Lost
GALVESTON
To U-Boats

Things around Texas ports are
pretty good, have two new ships
to crew up in the next few days.
{Continued from Page 1)
Have had a few of the boys come
ship, totally disabled with her" over from New Orleans to ship
propeller gone, is then an easy out. Had the pleasure of going
mark for^ a point-blank torpedo. aboard a new ship where I had
The Germans have long been to call the RMO for two ordin­
using torpedoes powered with aries and two acting AB's. These
electric batteries, which leave no birds would be turned to by the
tell-tale wakes of bubbles.
Bos'n on a job, and in a few min­
The enemy submarines, return­ utes he would go looking for
ing to the North Atlantic in ap-, them. When he did find them
parently great numbers after they were either in the messseveral months of comparative room or in their bunks. That
inactivity, continued the attacks crap was stopped once and for
until the convoys were almost all times. The point is this, you
within sight of the Canadian new men that have graduated
out of the training schools, you
coast line.
With their increased armament are going to sea to make a liv­
and their superiority in numbers ing like aU of us have done in
to the four to ten escort vessels the past. There is a strong
ordinarUy provided for an Allied union, and things are pretty good,
convoy, the U-boats ^probably wages, working conditions, and
will not hesitate, if they are living conditions. Don't for one
caught by surprise, to stay on the minute think that they have al­
surface and fight both surface ways been that way, or that they
vessels and planes with gunfire. will stay that way. For unless
This, indeed, may be the func­ you stand up and protect what
tion of some of the pack—^to at­ the old timers have built and
tack the escort vessels and pick handed down to you, you can
them off with .guns and torpe­ lose in a few months what it has
does. Another portion may fire taken years of sacrifice to build.
sonic or magnetic torpedoes into It is said that history repeats.
the midst of the convoy in an at­ Read back during the last War.
tempt to sink ships and make The wages, conditions and bonus
the convoy scatter. Still another was not no where near what you
portion may take position to pick are receiving today. Then after
off stragglers or isolated ships. the shipowner had made his,
At least two of the U-boats along with the help of the seawere believed to have been des­ service bureau, we were forced
troyed and six others probably to call a strike in 1921, which we
were damaged, the survivors lost to our sorrow. Then the
wages and conditions started to
said.
go
down until they finally got so
Except for the warships, which
low
that you either had to ac­
included the Canadian destroyer
cept
them or work ashore, and
St. Croix, formerly the U.S.S.
there
are many who still remem­
McCook, no official annotmceber
that
there were some com­
ment was made of the sinkings.
panies
that
you had to work
The battle began Sept. 19.
away at one cent a month, to get
It was not disclosed whether a job.
the attack was the same action
You are faced with the same
reported by the Royal Canadian
dose after this • war. The old
Air Force Sept. 28 in which
heads of the seaservice bureau
R 0A
long - range Liberators
are right in the saddle of the
battled six surfaced U-boats.
RMO to take over and break up
Survivors of two American your union. And remember that
and one Norwegian cargo ships it took from 1921 until 1934 to
gave a word picture of one of bring back what was lost. Men
the starkest sea fights since the were killed, jailed, and crippled
war began. They told of ships to help make the conditions that
breaking in half as torpedoes
ripped into their hulls, of injured
In Memory of
and dying men struggling for
Brother
hours in the icy, oil-thick Water
on the outer rim of the Arctic
JOE MOHOWSKI
circle, of exploding depth charges
(Able Seaman)
and of one U-boat being blasted
out of the water after being Born Jan., 1914. Died Aug. 1943
caught in the beam of a war­ aboard Rufus W. Peckham.
ship's searchlight.

For Further Information:
Call your union offices and tanker organizers at the
addresses listed below. You will always finds somebody at
these numbers excepting at night.

J- '

SEATTLE, WASH.—86 Seneca St.—Phone Elliott 6752.
—E. Coaster or Johnson.
PORTLAND, OREGON—111 West Burnside St.—Phone
Beacon 4336—John Massey or C. Atkins.
RICHMOND, CAUFORNTA-257 Fifth St.—Phone Rich­
mond 4021—Louie Glebe or Banks.
VANCOUVER, B. C.—340 B. Cambie St.—Phone Pacific
7824—Hugh Murphy.
WILMINGTON, California — 440 Avalon Blvd. —Phone
4449.
NEW YORK CITY — 105 Broad St. — Phone BOwling
Green 0-9530—Morris Weisbei^er.
SAN FRANCISCO—59 Clay St.-Phone Exbrook 8229—
PhU Conley.

you are enjoying today. And
just a few days ago another;
maritime union (NMU) was ne­
gotiating for the same wages
and conditions that you enjoy in
the SIU which they do not get
in their contracts and which
their leadership did not fight for
as your leadership has done.
Remember, in union there is
strength. With yom help you
can look back some day and say,
I was one of the buUdcrs of the
Seafarers' International Union.
E. R. WALLACE. Agent

TAMPA

f"'

Every since I have been Agent
in this port and the S.S. (
)
was coming in here there were
no beefs on her, but for the past
six months every trip there are
beefs galore.
That ship has had more AB's
and Boatswains aboard her in
that length of time than ever be­
fore. From my point of view
there must be some two legged
rats aboard her.
I understand that there are
two, but they are so damn slick
that it is hard to catch them. I
suppose that Bro. Army will have
to contend with her for awhile;
luck to you lad.
There is one sure way of tell­
ing when winter is approaching
and that is when you see all of
the Tampa boys drifting in to
soak up some of this hot .sun­
shine, and vitimin B—eer.
Things here are very slow for
the present time although we
are looking forward to a pickup
in shipping.
The USS has opened up' a ho­
tel and recreation center here
for the boys that drift down this
way and from the looks of things
it may turn out OK, but it is too
close to the Maritime training
school for much benefit to the
bonified men that go to sea.
D. L. PARKER, Ageni

•i?l

m•

'•^SOHa/s
Will all members of the crew
of the S. S. Norwalk. particularly
H. Jayner, A. Page, E. Olsen, C.
Kampf. H. Clements, R. Holte
and J. Dogart, for a voyage com­
mencing June 5, 1942. get in
touch with Paul C. Matthews, 11
Broadway. New York City.
OSCAR HEIL
Stop in the office of the Sec­
retary-Treasurer next time you
are in New
York.
I
LESNIAK, ORGS and
WOODBURY
Your log beef has been settled
in your favor. Collect from Mr.
Daily, New York shipping com­
missioner.
SIDNEY DAY GREY
You have $43.71 coming from
McCormick Line. Collect in
New York.
LESLIE C. TAYLOR. No. 27991
Stop in the office of the Secre­
tary-Treasurer next time you are
in New York.
JULIUS WONTOR
Stop in the office of the Secre­
tary-Treasurer next time you axe
in New York.

"THE WORKMEN HAVE DECIDED rr^ TIME YOU DID
SOMETHING ABOUT THE/R TKAMSPORTATTON PROBLEMSi"

J*--

EDWARD P. MALUE, 23469
Your discharges are in the of­
fice of the Secretary-Treasurer.

4\

1

�THE

Page Four-

If.-

1.
|b

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, Odober 15. 1943

Admiral Reveals British - American
Nazi Prisoners Used In Attempt Ship Rivalry
To Break Down Shoreside Union
•v

The LOG has twice reported the fact that shipowners
are using Nfixi prisoners to do seamen's work, thus hoping
to undermine the contract and the union. This week comes
word that prisoners are also being used by shoreside em­
ployers in their offensives against organized labor. In Elwood, Indiana an employers is» The Union said that it will
using prisoners in a canning press unfair labor practice
plant to try to break a local charges against the firm, through
which has gone on record to the National Labor Relations
support the war 100%!
Board, contending that local
union
labor which has been
The plant is the local Frazier
available
to the management has
Packing Co., which is using 100
been
turned
down in favor of
prisoners to relieve a "labor
Nazi
employes.
shortage" which the United Can­
nery, Agricultural Packing &amp; Al­ The "super-men" from the fa­
lied Workers Union claims is therland are not only treated to
special consideration as employnon-existant.

es, but also apparently are al­
lowed to scrawl expressions of
their distorted philosophy on
company property.
Company property has been
decorated with swastikas, iron
crosses, and slogans such as "Heil
Hitler," and "Germany Today,
Tomorrow and Forever,"
, The Union said that the Nazis
work eight hours a day, are given
a five minute rest period every
hour, get one hour for lunch, and
are treated to fresh tomatoes and
catsup. American union workers
slave 12, 14 and up to 17 hours
per day, get half an hour for
lunch, and are treated to no "to­
mato surprises."

Seeds of a shurp post war conflict between the United
States and Great Britain are contained in the gigantic ship­
building program conducted by both nations during the
war. That the two "United Nations" view each otheig
suspiciously was revealed this week by Admiral Howard L,

•Vickery who returned fi-om a
tour of British shipyards. Speak­
ing to a correspondent for the
New York Times, the Vice Chairman of the Maritime Commission
said, "I told them we intend to
become a maritime nation and
intend to stay one. I said we
would do it by cooperation, but il
they didn't want to cooperate
With the change of name and we'd stay one anyhow."
registry last week of the Liberty
This blunt talk has brought in­
ship William H. Todd to Greek
to
the open the commercial riv­
ownership the . Greek Maritime
alries
which have been submerg­
Union now has, for the first time
ed
by
the necessities of war—but
in its history, two completely
never
eliminated.
unionized vessels. This was
made possible by the recent af­
Vickery was concerned over*
firmation in England of a collec­ the fact that Britain is concen­
tive agreement between the trating on larger, faster commer-^
union and the Greek Government cial ships while the United
and shipowners.
State.s has been building Liberty
The Amerike, as the ship ships which will hardly be able
WASHINGTON, Sept. 22. — A henceforth will be known, is the to compete with other maritime
maintenance of union member­ second of two such vessels turn­ nations after the war. While the
ship provision ordered by the ed oyer to the Greeks for opera­ British produced ships are in the
National War Labor Board is ef­ tion for the duration of the war category of "competitive ships,"
fective only for the duration of under lend-lease agreements. The the Admiral said, "the American
a union contract and, if ordered first was the DeWitt Hyde, which overall shipbuilding program
renewed by the board must con­ was renamed the HeUas.
was so much greater that we are
tain a 15-day "escape" clause, un­
producing about ten times as
EQUALITY IS GOAL
der present WLB policy, accord­
many ships as the British—even
ing to an opinion by William E. Commenting on the acquisition of the 'competitive' type."
Simkin, chairman of the WLB of the latest additions to the
Shipbuilding Commission, in the Greek Merchant Marine, Petros Vickery pointed out that as a
first case before the National Spiridacos, s e c r e tary of the result of this shipbuilding record,
Board or the Shipbuilding Com­ Greek Maritime Union said that England after the war would be
mission in which the issue was the new collective agreement unable to maintain the suprem­
marked the first real step made acy of the .merchant sea" lanes
raised.
The commission, in an order by his union toward achieving which she previously held, and
released Monday, granted the equality with the seamen of the slie would find it "advisable" to
request of the Federal Ship­ other United Nations. He as­ cooperate with the United States.
building &amp; Drydock Co. that pro­ serted that he looked forward to
Vickery was asked by report­
visions be made in the contract great improvement in wages and ers how it was that England con­
with the Industrial Union of working conditions for Greek tinued to build merchant ships in
Marine and Shipbuilding Work­ seamen.
face of a recently announced
ers (CIO) for a 15-day period in "The Greek seamen," he de­ agreement between President
which members of the union clared, "have been right in the Roosevelt and Prime Minister
may resign if they do not wish thick of things in this war. Dur­ Churchill that England would
to remain in the union for dura­ ing the past three years Greek produce warships with the build­
shipping losses in enemy action
tion of the contract.
ing of merchant ships left to the
Labor members of the com­ have exceeded 1,500,000 tons. United States.
mission dissented. The union had With this loss over 4,000 Greek
"I'd better skip that," he said.
requested that a union shop seamen have given up their
clause be substituted for the lives.
^
maintenance of membership pro­ "Though nearly one-fifth of Seamen's Institute
the total number of Greek sea­
vision.
Opened
In
Etrooklyri
men have been lost, we stiU have
more than 10,000 who continue
Bishop Thomas E. Molloy of
to serve aboard Greek ships and Brooklyn dedicated yesterday af­
the vessels of the Allied nations. ternoon the new $250,000 Cath­
olic Seamen's Institute of Brook­
ENORMOUS LOSSES
lyn, Hicks and Rapelye Streets,
RECOUNTED
"The Liberty ships we have a non-sectarian recreation center
received are a welcome addition for men of the merchant marine.
B. B. Parson
to the replacements from Great Five thousands persons crowded
Gilbert T. Arnetl
upstair
Britain, but they are by no means the auditorium, filled
L. W. Beeby—No. 3167
rooms
where
loudspeakers
had
enough to make good even a
E. J. Noonan—TO 1232
been
installed
and
gathered
in
small percentage of the" terrific
the
street.
James Reaves—^No. 22983
losses sustained by the Greek
Bishop Molloy paid tribute in
Joe H. Boyle
merchant fleet. Today, after three
his
speech to the late Rev. AlI. Rodriguez—^TC 149
years of war, we have only about
phonse
Rickert, who founded the
seventy ships, representing some
institute
in 1936, and to Rev.
Keep In Touch With 500,000 tons, out of a pre-war to­
William
Farrell, port chaplain
Your Local Draft Board. tal of over 500 vessels.
and institute director.
Mgr. James H. Griffiths, vice
chancellor of the Brooklyn Dio­
ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
cese, in his address, praised "the
WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 20th TO 25th
unsung heroes of the deep—the
men
of the merchant marine"
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL
Mgr. Richard B. McHugh pre­
sided.
SHIPPED
340
272
291
903

Two Union
Ships For
The Greeks

Communities Plan To Limit Union
Honor Merchantmen Maintenance
WASHINGTON -Governors are
pledging wholehearted support
to an appeal by Admiral Emory
S. Land, War Shipping Adminis­
trator, to give merchant seamen
a place of equality with other
members of the armed forces on
town and community honor roUs.
Admiral Land made his appeal
in personal letters to Governors
of the 48 States and to Governor
Generals of United States Terri­
tories and Possessions as a result
of a fiood of letters from famil­
ies and friends of merchant sea­
men who said that in many com­
munities they were not counted
among the Nation's war heroes.
Land pointed out that Congress
has officially recognized the out­
standing services. of these men
. by providing medals for distin­
guished service and other honor
awards. He also called attention
to a declaration by President
Roosevelt that the work of our
merchant seamen is just as vital
to our ultimate victory as that of
the men in the armed forces.
That their's is a most dangerous
job. Admiral Land declared, is
attested by the grim toll of their
lost and injured.

DUTCH SEAMEN'S
UNION OPENS NEW
WEST COAST OFFICE
Following a tour of the West
Coast, Peter J. Vandcnbcrgo, .-.ccretary of the American section
of the Dutch Central Transport,
Workers' Federation, has report­
ed that the union's new office in
San Francisco is speeding up
shipping and furnishing neces­
sary manpower to merchant
ships sailing under the Dutch
flag.
The Dutch union is an affiliate
of the International Transport
Workers' Federation.
Growing Netherlands shipping
activities in the Pacific necessit­
ated the establishment of new
quarters, Vandenberge said.
The Netherlands labor official
also said that the training school
for able-bodied seamen conduct­
ed by the SUP has met with
considerable success in San Fran­
cisco. *

SIU Prisoner Of
War Receives Our
Correspondence
Brother John Monteverde is
someplace in Nazi Germany, a
prisoner of war. His ship was
torpedoed last year and he was
fished out of the water by the
Germans and taken to the land
of "Supermen." Several months
ago he wrote to the union de­
manding to know some details
concerning overtime in our
agreements. The prison camp
didn't stop him fr^m thinking of
union problems and conditions.
John Hawk sent him a reply,
giving what details were possible
under the circumstances, and
this week a second letter came
from Monteverde. Here it is:
Dear BrothoK Hawk:
Received your letter today
and was glad to hear from
you. All of us here are Am­
ericans and seem to be en­
joying good health and are
sure we won't be here much
longer. We were also glad to
hear that everything is go­
ing good back there in re­
gard to our agreements. I
am personally glad to know that you are keeping my rec­
ords up to date so that I can
square away after the war.
All members here join me
in wishing everyone lots of
luck. Well, this is about all
I can think of now so I'll
close. Hoping to hear from
you as often as possible, I
remain,
John Monteverde,
Prisoner of War No. 2998
P.S. Best regards to Charlie
Waid if you see him.

What Is a
SCAB?
"After the God had finished the
rattlesnake, the toad, the vam­
pire, He had some awful sub­
stance left with which he made
a scab. A scab is a two-legged
animal with a corkscrew soul—
a water-logged brain, a combin­
ation backbone made of jelly
and glue."—Jack London.
L

REGISTERED

:.

265

200

190

655

Keep In Touch With
Your Local Draft Board,

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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
AMERICAN LABOR FACES SLAVERY&#13;
BE KIND TO WAR PROFITEERS DEPARTMENT&#13;
TEN ALLIED SHIPS LOST TO U-BOATS&#13;
ROBIN LINE SHIP REVEALED AS A SUPER-BELLY ROBBER&#13;
IT'S MORE ICE FOR LABOR FREEZE&#13;
AN APOLOGY&#13;
TEXAS JAILS LABOR LEADER WHEN HE TALKS OF UNION&#13;
SIU AND TANKER MEMBERS ON WEST COAST&#13;
ADMIRAL REVEALS BRITISH-AMERICAN SHIP RIVALRY&#13;
NAZI PRISONERS USED IN ATTEMPT TO BREAK DOWN SHORESIDE UNION&#13;
TWO UNION SHIPS FOR THE GREEKS&#13;
COMMUNITIES PLAN TO HONOR MERCHANTMEN&#13;
SIU PRISONER OF WAR RECEIVES OUR CORRESPONDENCE&#13;
LIMIT UNION MAINTENANCE&#13;
DUTCH SEAMEN'S UNION OPENS NEW WEST COAST OFFICE&#13;
SEAMEN'S INSTITUTE OPENED IN BROOKLYN</text>
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                    <text>m

'te '- :

Is

"3

jj^&gt;RE3RS JOQ •- «•

' t% •

IF ANYONE ASKS A MAN
\T0 JOIN A UNION. I'LL'
\THR0WHIMINJA1L/

•r! ^

OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
VOL. V.

in

NEW YORK. N.Y., OCTOBER. 22. 1943

No. 29

GULF ORGANIZING
DRIVE PLANNED BY
SEAFARERS &amp; AFL
Gulf fishermen and towboatmen are going to be organized on a big scale under the
banner of the SIU! This was the good news that came out of the American Fe'deration
of Labor's annual convention held last week in Boston. The convention went on rec­
ord unanimously to send AFL organizers into the area at once and bring the benefits of
unionism to those marine workers who are now being exploited by the shipowners and

Kilgore Report Toes
NMU-Stalinist Line
By Matthew Dushane

Savannah Branch Wins
Fight To Crew Ships
Named For AFL Men

Senator Harry M. Kilgore, Chairman of the subcom­
mittee on War Mobilization, submitted a report to Con­
gress on October 7th. This report dealt with mobilization
of shipping resources.
Pages No. 1 to 3 deals with "Summary of Findings."

fish buyers.
The request for AFL aid in or­
ganizing this area was presented
to the convention in a resolution
submitted by Brothers Harry
Lundeberg, John Mogan and Pat
McHugh. The SIU delegates
point out to the convention the
fact that our union did not have
the funds with which to launch
an organizing drive of the scale
needed to cover the Gulf. The
convention's committee on reso­
lutions studied the SIU request,
and submitted the following re­
port to the assembled delegates:

Under this heading the commit-•
short, concentrating shipping
tee reports on the surrender of
"Your committee gave con­
in the Atlantic is three times
Italy, and the crumbling of the
siderable attention and time to
as effective as in the Pacific.
Axis powers. However, the re­
this resolution and had before
Three times as many troops
port lays special stress upon the
it the sponsors, as well as Di­
can be transported, three times
tonnage of merchant ships avail­
rector of Organization Frank
the volume of munitions can
able and recommends that the
P. Fenton.
be carried to batter down the
bulk of the tonnage be diverted
"The woric outlined in the
more
powerful
enemy."
Don't know whether or not you have heard about the to the Atlantic in an all out ef­
resolution covers a tremendous
On pages No. 4 and 5 we find
launching of a ship by the Georgia Federation of Labor fort towards the complete elim­ some more statements that are area, practically the entire salt
here at Savannah, Ga., but the Georgia Federation of Labor ination of Hitler and his Euro­ very interesting.
water shore line of the United
-put on a bond drive to pay for a Liberty ship and the pean satellites;
States, but apparently the most
"The unexpected drop in
It is interesting to note the po­
needs seem to be in the Gulf
sinkings and the unprecedent­
priviledge of naming it and when the bond drive was over sition
taken in the report regard­
area.
ed ship building program in
they found that they had sold^
ing the South Pacific Theatre of
"Your committee recom­
the
first
8
months
of
1943,
tem­
enough bonds to pay for two
operations.
mends
that the Executive
porarily
outran
the
military
ships and name them. The first
"Today, with our military
Council
and the Director of Or­
and
civilian
transport
pro­
of these, the S.S. Jerome Jones,
shipping divided almost evenly
ganization assign organizers to
grams . . . essential lend-lease
-was to be launched and the keel
between the Pacific and the
the Gulf Coast area to attempt
supplies of munitions and food
for the other, the S.S. Robert
Atlantic', we can conduct only
to work out an organizing pro­
have been cut repeatedly for
Fechnei-, was to be laid fhat same
limited operations against the
gram among the fishermen and
alleged lack of shipping space.
day. Everything came .off ac­
Japaneg.e while mounting a
cording to schedule and the Jer­
Organized labor has been
major offensive in Europe. In
(Continued on Page 3)
(Continued on Page 4)
ome Jones was launched and the
proven right again in its conten­
keel for the Robert Fechner laid
tion that good wages and decent
in record time.
working conditions will "lick"
- I had taken it for granted that
manpower shortages. The latest
this ship would be alloted to a
"proof of the pudding" is at Boe­
Company who had a contract
ing Aircraft in Seattle.
with the SIU but I found out that
Several month? ago Boeing was
the WSA had alloted the ship to
in
a desperate, plight .because of
-the American Export Line; an
inability
to recruit enough work­
NMU outfit and they already had
ers
to
meet
military schedules for
'gotten a crew together and they
flying
Fortresses.
•were here in Savannah. Although
All sorts -Of propaganda meth­
; the committee of the Georgia
ods
were tried in an endeavor to
.Federation of Labor had been in
jWashington 3 months prior to the mobilize needed help. The army
•launching to get this ship liamed threatened to cancel contracts
;for. a Labor Leader in Georgia, right and left in the Seattle area
the Board of Allocation claims in order to -force workers out of
it was an over-sight on their part other plants, into Bpeing's.
in aiioting this ship to a com­
BROWN CALLED IT
pany with an-NMU-contract.
"NIBBLING"
\irell, I really hit the ceiling:
President Harvey W. Brown of
.and got busy and contacted
the
International Association of
everyone I knew who would be
Machinists,
which has Boeing un-,
able to hplp in straightening out
der
a
union
shop agreement,
this matter. I wrote Dushane in,
warned
that
these
methods were
Washington and Morgenthau, the
"mere
nibbling"
at
the problem.
Sec.-Trpas., and it wasn't two
Notables at the AFL Convention in Boston which closed last week after voting to aid the
'The
"real
trouble,"
he said, is
day's time before the South At­
SIU
in organizing the Gulf towboatmen and fishermen. Left to right: AFL Secretary-Treasurer
that
wage
rates
were
too
low
lantic Steamship Line called me
George
Meany, Under-Secretary of War Robert Patterson, Major General Sherman Miles and
compared
with
shipyards
and
to inform me that they had been
AFL President William Green.
{Continued
on
Page
3)
' (Contimted on Page 2)

By Charles Waid

Labor Was Right;
Wage Hike Solves
Manpower Needs

�yvT^^r^^\
' Page Two

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. October 22. 1943 1
Si

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMmiCA
Atlantic and Galf District

;fRepoT?T orv

^^ASHIIVSrOIV
E-* •

Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor

board so that they can .enter a ILO Marine Division, Five towC. -Waid, Agent, SIU, Savan­ claim for the crew members who boat companies in Baltimore. SIU
HARRY LUNDEBERG ------ President
nah: G. Wakefield, field repre­ were on the ship at the time of Great Lakes, involving appr(&gt;xsentative of the RMO, sent a let­ the attack.
110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.
imately 32 companies. SIU, At­
ter to several S.S. companies and
lantic &amp; Gulf District, Smith &amp;
NATIONAL
JOHN HAWK ------- Secy-Treas. ' the union, to the effect that the
Johnson Company.
WAR
LABOR BOARD
union ...apd the., .RMO- .had-.,.an.
P. Q, Bo$-25,&lt;g6i'':ion P., J^Iew 3ferk City
-• All cases that are refercd td
agreement whefeby if in any The Maritime panel will meet the National War Board for ap­
MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - yiTasdnngton JRjep, , port .there was a shortage of men, Monday and Tuesday. The proval, under the boards ruling
the RMO would supply union MM&amp;P has ten cases — M£1BA must be processed by the board's
424 Jth Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
men from the next nearest port. has eleven cases—^NMU has one, analyist. The panel is then given
•
V *
!4PS
In this case the Savannah agent case—ACA, one case — Comm.' the results of the work the ham
was informed by the RMO that Telegraphers Union, one case— and eggers do, and are supposed
Directory of Branches
SIU union men were available Inland Boatmen, CIO, -one case, to act on the anlyist's report.
PHONE
ADDRESS
in Charleston, and that the SIU
BRANCH
agent
would have to get his re­
NEW YORK (4)
2 Stone St
BOwHng Green 9-3437
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
placements
from Charleston in SAVANNAH BRANCH
BALTIMORE (2)
,14 North Cay St
Calvert 4539
the future and not the Gulf.
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St,
Lombard 7651
WINS CREWING OF
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
The union has no agreement; SPONSORED SHIPS
NEW ORLEANS (14) ..309 Chartres St
Canal 3336
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St
Savannah 3-1728
with the RMO as outlined by Mr.
TAMPA
423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St
Dial 2-1392
G. Wakefield. Our contracts caU
{Continued from Page 1)
PUERTO RICO
45 Ponce de Leon
Puerto de TIerra
for the union to supply men to allotted the Jerome Jones and I
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-8043
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway... Ft. Lauderdale 1601
the employers' vessels, and they
could get busy and get them a
must be supplied from our
crew together. Well, J had
union hiring halls. Charleston enough men registered in this
All American merchant sea­
has no SIU hall, therefore the port for a whole crew without men arc to receive identifying
PUBLICATION OFFICE;
Savannah agent has the author-;
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
having to get one gandy dancer.
ity
to get replacements from the; So there she sailed, a ship paid insignia under a recent authori­
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8345
Gulf. However, the agent may; for by the Georgia Federation of zation by Congress, the Wat;
make some kind of an arrange­
Labor and manned by an SIU Shipping Administration reveal­
ment with the RMO to ship SIU' crew.
ed last week. Seamen and of­
union men who may be in Have also heard that the WSA ficers who have served in Ameri­
Charleston.
has already alloted the S.S. Rob­ can vessels since Dec. 7, 1941, or;
Any arrangement that the Sa­ ert Fechner to the South Atlantic
vannah agent may reach with Steamship Line, to be turned on any foreign fiag vessels oper­
the RMO would have to be ap­ over to them when she is com­ ated for the United States Mari­
proved by the membership. This, pleted.
time Commission or WSA, will
I feel, should be done to protect
be
eligible to wear the new em­
Shipping in this port for the
the membership of the SIU, last couple of weeks has really blem.
they should ^never be allowed in otherwise the RMO will be load­ been good. Shipped everyone
Editor;
The Seamen's Service Awards
ing SIU ships with non-union and
We, members of the SIU, the engine room and are so NMU men, who will be enjoying with pants on that I could get Committee will be responsible
would very much like the slop poorly made they fall apart in a the benfits of the SIU contracts my hands on, and I mean I real­ for the issuance of the insignia,
chest situation ort these Liberty month's time. That is, of course, while SIU men pound the beach ly. picked this town clean and am" which will be a circular gold and
ships investigated. The case of providing they don't get wet as and be subject to induction into still looking for sailors and es­ silver emblem, consisting of a
pecially ABs. Shipping surely background of a compass card in
ours, the S.S. J. G. Hibben, is be­ the cardboard in them comes out
the army for over-staying the al­ does look bright in this port for
much
faster
if
they
get
wet.
gold on which is mounted a Fed­
yond description. We know :that
lotted time ashore.
the next couple of weeks. I will eral shield in silver with a sup­
any action taken ,by the .union Shorts are so that after one
J. Flanagan, Agent, SIU, Balti­ be needing men with all ratings erimposed gold anchor with Uni­
w-ill be too late to do us any .good washing you could use them for
but prompt action by the union mosquito nets and the handker­ more: Several crew members of in all departments and, don't, ted States Merchant Marine let­
officials may make it a lot easier chiefs are made to sell for ten the S.S. Walker Taylor requested have anyone registered here. Any tered around the medal.
for any brothers who have the cents but they have all been re­ to be paid off of the vessel 24 of you men who are ready to The WSA has also authorized,
misfortune to be caught in a like jected, so they do us the iavor hours after all cargo was dis­ ship out can come on down here under similar Congressional ac­
of letting us have them for nine charged. Master refused. Crew and do so. Don't think you will tion, ithe award of Mariner's Med­
manner.
left the vessel and • they were be on the beach for long from
We have been informed that cents. They have no large sizes
als, Combat Bars, War Zone
given a six months' suspension the way things have been going. I Bars and service fiags and but­
in
kakhi
shirts
or
small
sizes
in
the slop chest is no longer in the
by the 9.G.
Have really had me on the run tons in further recognition of
Captain's hands, but is now the kakhi pants. All the articles they
looking
for men lately.
have
are
too
large
for
the
small
This
was
done
on
the
grounds
meritorious war service by sea­
property of the Maritime Com­
fellows
and
too
small
for
the
big
that
there
was
ballast
in
the
hold.
mission. If so, we understood the
men. The Mariner's Medal is to
be awarded to men who are
Government supported the Mari­ fellows. We do not know whether The ballast had been in the hold,
wounded or suffer physical in­
time Commission pnd we want or not this has been brought to for three trips, aiid the vessel
jury in enemy action. The com­
to know who is collecting the; the union'.s attention before and started to reload with the same
we hope the situation is rem^ ballast still aboard!
profit, or shall we say graft.
EMIL DUPONT: You have 211/2 bat bar is being issued to seamen
edied so it will not have to be
Advised Agent Flanagan to re-i hours overtime coming from the who serve in a ship which is di­
The quality of these articles in
brought up again, and we also quest a rehearing on the case and! Calmar Line.
rectly attacked or damaged by
the slop chest is not worth men-;
would like to know the outcome also request a transcript of the'
an
instrumentality of war. The
•
•
•
tioning as everything is second,
of this affair on our return.
proceedings
on
the
original
trial.
War
Zone Bars will be present­
•or third hand merchandise and
Crew whicli paid off the S. S.
The
trial
was
held
in
Norfolk.
ed
for
service in war theatres.
CREW
OF
THE
the quantity is so small that wc;
William Balterson, October 1943,
Flanagan
advised
that,
he
would
S.
S.
J.
G.
HIBBEN
are at sea about one and a half
have an attack bonus coming. The merchant marine service
contact the agent there and relay Collect Bull Line.
fiag and service lapel buttons
months an,d the supply is running
all the information he has ofi the
are
for display by members of
out. Needless to say the prices
• * •
the
immediate families of sea­
ADVERTISEMENT case.
on these articles is not second or
Regarding the food shortage on SHELTON and*DOWLING of men serving in the American
third class prices but first class.
the last trip of the S. S. Gebrge
•Some articles are. not even on
PHILLIPSBURG, N. J.. the Seas Shipping Company E. Hale, have disputed overtime Merchant Marine during the war
scow, the WSA is working on
. board, such as heavy underwear, October 5 — A torpedoed
coming. Collect at Waterman period. The service button, of
this
case.
enameled - metal, will carry a
which is in direct violation of the
Line.
miniature design of the service
articles we signed. This was real seaman, home on a month's
M. Trainor, Agents, SIU, Nor­
• • *
necessary for going around the leave, applied for a new "A" folk: Re:S.S. (
) and crew's Deck Department of S. S. Peter flag.
Horn in mid-winter. The heavy gasoline ration book to re­
claim for an attack bonus, the Zingas which paid off Oct. 1943,
socks are all thirds and there are
board has sent the following have overtime coming. Collect
place one he lost. The OPA
no white socks to be had. One said he would have to ad­
communication:
from Bull Line.
crew member tried to buy a
* « •
"We
have
determined
that
small size pair of dungarees and vertise the loss before an­
the attack on Algiers, during Steward's Department of S. S.
bad to settle for a pair of navy other could be issued.
the .morning of August 27th, Kofresi, which psdd off Oct. 1943,
CARL JACOBSON
dungarees that was traded in to
He placed the following ad
1943; consequently, port attack have money coming for extra
the slop chest. Even these were in an Easton, Pa., paper:
bonus is payable to the crew meals. Collect Waterman Lind!
See Mr. Williams, Rooln 1045,
two sizes too large. Tlie shoe,
menibers of the S.S. I
)
"LOST —In Mediterranean
42
Broadway, New York City.
situation tops them all; we are
if this vessel was at Algiers at Steward's Department of S. S.
Bea,
"A"
gas
ration
book.
paying $4.12 a pair for shoes that
the time of the attack on this Peter Sanger, Voyage No. 1, see
NORMAN RENNINGER
could be bought ashore for one Horace A. Smith, 574 Con­
date."
New York Patrolman Hart con­
gress St., Phillipsburg."
half that price or even less. They
Advised all Agents to tack a cerning extra meals and bonus Contact Miss Ada Harrison,
Are all rubber soled and heeled—
copy of this on their bulletin money coming.
3819 Manila Ave., Oakland, Calif.

New Insignia
For Merchant
Seamen

E£tor's Mail Bag

I u;

U

Crew Benounces Slop Chest Chisel

MONEY DUE

• .1 -'-'i

t

m

Mii'f " 1^' "

• •-i)
"O

;

�;Fj;iday,October 22, 1943

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Pag© ThxM 7

Gulf Organizing Drive Launched
jor operators in the peacetime
{Continued front Page 1)
Jow boalmen in lhat ierrilory period, and
WHEREAS, It now develops'
on a Ixial basis."
Brother Frank Fenton will now that these new oil barges arc to'^
consult with Lundeberg and East be operated on a twelve-hour!
Furuselh, also Harry Lundebeig,
BOSTON
Coast officials, and organizers work day baisis, and
Duke Dushane and Whitey
•will be appointed and sent to •WHEREAS, They find that the
I attended the AFL Conven­ Hawk.
•work in the very near future. Government agencies have
tion that was held in Boston the I would like to remind the
Already requests for aid have awarded these barges to compan­
past two weeks, along with members of our union to stress
%een coining into SIU headquar­ ies having a twelve-hour work; BOSTON, Oct. 7—^The mem­ Brother Pat McHugh, Secretary the importance of the Social Seters from towboatmen and fisher- dhy and no union relations, and bership of the American Federa­ of the Atlantic Fishermen's ciurity Act to the members of
tmen throughout the south, indi- WHEREAS, The Seafarers' In-, tion of Labor was brought to 6,- Union.
their family or dependents, that
,eating thai these workers - know ternational lUnicn is unable to' 564,141, the highest in its history,
Your union, the SIU had a res­ in the event thai-they pass on to
.the score on unionism and what attempt this widespread organi­ today by the return of the Inter­ olution requesting the AFL to contact the' nearest Social Se­
4t can do for them. Hundreds of zing campaign at this critical national Association of Machin­ put on organizers to organize curity Board and put in a rlainfiT
ists.
•workers are merely waiting the time, and
the fishermen
and towboatmen If they fail to make a claim with­
.appearance of an BIU man to WHEREAS, Their sea-going; Announcement that the machr in the Gulf. As a delegate to the in a certain period they wiU lose
sign them up.
members are being shifted from inists' union, which left the AFL AFL Convention, yours truly, all rights under the Social Secur­
But make no mistake, the one part of the nation to another, on May 27 because of a jurisdic­ along with Brother Pat McHugh, ity Act.
tional dispute with the United had to appear before the resolu­
The Port of Boston is experi­
tshipowners are waiting also—de- and
Brotherhood of Carpenters, was tions committee to show cause encing the heaviest shipping rec­
•termined that their workers shall
WHEREAS, Because of the war
-not receive decent wages and they are compelled to establish ready to return to the fold was why these organizers were need­ ord in history. We are having
made by George Meany, AFL ed. After explaining to the com­ quite a few West Coast ships
working conditions. There is a temporary offices and "inove out
secretary, at today's convention mittee the geographical outlay here and I believe there should
stiff struggle ahead, but" we are to little ports never before hearc
session.
and the territory that must be be a West Coast representative
.certain that before long the Gulf of, which has involved an in­
After long applause the dele­ covered, the committee recom­ stationed here in Boston as they
•coast is going to be union!'
crease in personnel and a corres
gates ratified a report of the ex­ mended to the executive council have as many as four to six
Following is the text of the ponding increase in overhead ex­
ecutive
council which contained that our resolution be concurred ships here daily.
SIU resolution presented to the pense, and
a letter from Harvey W. Brown, in.
At this time I would like to
AFL convention:
WHEREAS, They find that the president of the machinists'
It was brought out at the Con­ mention that the five Flaherty
WHEREAS, The members of amount of revenue the interna­ union, stating that his union was vention " that over two million Brothers, John, Cy, Bill, Eddie, I
the Executive Committee of the tional has on hand with which to withdrawing its resignation.
members of organized labor are forgot the other boy's name, have
Seafarers' International Union of operate renders the situation to
now
serving in the armed forces. all received their tickets and are
The machinists, said Mr.
North America has petitioned the an impossible status, and
Joseph P. Ryan, President of sailing as mates or engineers. I
WHEREAS, They further fee Meany, had 625,160 members and the International Longshoremen's believe this makes some sort of
American Federation of Labor
were now restored in full stand­
for assistance in organizing a that unless the American Feder­
ing,
as they had paid their per Association, took the floor and a record.
large group of 30,000 worrkers in ation of Labor can come to their
capita tax for the months since gave quite a talk on what the A salute to our galldnt mem­
•the fishing industry from Browns­ rescue in this war emergency
May. The amount was $45,281. seamen were doing and paid bers.
ville, Texas, at the Mexican Bor- that some dual or would-be dual
great tribute to the late Andrew
JOHN MOGAN, Ageni
President William Green, who
&lt;Jer to Norfolk, Virginia, and union is likely to intervene, and
throughout the Pacific Coast and WHEREAS, A Federally own­ welcomed the machinists back,
Alaskan territories, and
ed Corporation known as Federal said that the negotiations which
WHEREAS, The Seafarers' In­ Barge Lines, which operates all preceded settlement of the juris­
ternational Union of North Am­ traffic on the Mississippi River dictional dispute proved that good
erica has established local unions has established an eight-hour day sense, tolerance and fairness in MANPOWER PROBLEM EXAGGERATED
•throughout the Nation, some of with overtime in excess of eight negotiations usually resulted in
IN ORDER TO SMEAR AMERICAN LABOR
ending such disputes.
which have been operated with hours, therefore be it
only partial success, while local RESOLVED, That the Ameri­ Inasmuch as the United Mine Have the "brass hats" and 1943, to July, 1944, to replace men
unions in the New England can Federation of Labor now in Workers are assured of reinstate­ other government officials delib­ inducted into the armed forces
states and Pacific Coast Ports convention assembled at Boston, ment in the AFL within a rea­ erately exaggerated the serious and to supply additional workers
-have been operated with total Massachusetts, goes on record to sonable time, delegates today ex­ ness of the manpower situation to war industries.
•success, and
give the Seafarers' International pressed satisfaction that the fed­ in order to foist shackles on the
Thus, if Princeton is right
WHEREAS, The Seafarers' In-' Union of North America the ne­ eration would have a member­ nation's workers?
and the enormous waste it cites
assistance to ship of 7,164,141 once the 600,000
-ternational Union has striven cessary financial
On the pretext of a critical
were eliminated, the country
diligently to organize the fishing carry through to a successful miners were back in the fold.
scarcity of labor, army and navy
would have a surplus rather
conclusion an organizing cam­
industry, and ,
chiefs, with.the backing of Tories than lack of workers .
WHEREAS, Their financial paign among the fishermen,
in Congress, have been clamoring
Princeton's report blames the
.ability is so limited as to prohibit bargemen, and towboatmen in
for a so-called "national service" appalling squander of labor di­
, an organizing drive on a large the above mentioned field.
law, under which workers would rectly on managements. "Ineffi­
•scale, due to the fluctuating opbe drafted for the profit of pri­ cient managerial conditions, poSr
vate employers.
lerations such as confront the sea- AFL MEMBERSHIP
plant layout, lack of cooperation
jnen, fishermen and fish cannery
However, confidential figures between department heads, in­
SHOWS
BIG
GAIN
workers during the war period,
circulated among research men terruptions of work caused by
and
in
the War Production Board and poor scheduling" are among
BOSTON — The dues - paid
{Continued from Page 1) .
War Manpower Commission, abuses listed in the report.
, WHEREAS, They have exten­ membership of the AFL at the
sive information regarding the end of its fiscal year, Aug. 31, other war industries in the re­ which LABOR was privileged to Bad working conditions are al­
see, revealed this week that the so described as a major factor in
fishing industry, and
1943, stood at 5,939,021, Secre­ gion.
WHEREAS, They have defin­ tary-Treasurer George Meany re­ After attempting every other manpower shortage, for the coun­ wastage of labor. Lack of ade­
ite proof that wholesale exploita­ ported to the convention.
nostrum, government officials try as a whole, is much less crit- quate grievance machinery, untion is taking place relative to This represents a net gain of finally decided to try Brown's ical than the public has been led healthful ^surroundings, tyrannic­
al foremen, complicated wage
the fishermen who deliver the 457,440 members since the last remedy." Army chieftains des­ to believe.
An
even
more
sensational
dis­
setups,
failure of management to
•catch, and
annual report made to the Tor­ cended on the National War Laclosure
as
to
manpower
came
take
workers
into their confi­
WHEREAS, Large groups of onto convention in 1942.
jor Board and demanded that it
these fishermen live on incomes However, the total does not grant a substantial raise to Boe­ from Princeton University. No dence are evils recorded by the
•y
which are actually lower than include the membership of the ing workers ,regardless of "hold one needs be told that Princeton university.
"Do not expect the employe to
those of the sharecroppers of the International Association of Ma­ the line" regulations or other or­ is not a champion of organized
labor,
yet,
in
an
independent
accept
unnecessary hardships in
deep south, and
chinists which paid per capita ders. The board complied, re­ study made by its department of the working environment just
WHEREAS, The officers of the tax on 328,500 members in 1942 classifying the workers so as to economics, the university arrived because it is war-time," the uni­
Seafarers' International Union of but withdrew its affiliation in the give them increases of about 15 at the conclusion that employers versity emphasizes. "In encour­
North America, further petition past year. Thus the gross gain in cents an hour, Tt did so, it said, are wasting the equivalent of 5,- aging employes to give steadily
the American Federation of La-, new members for the year was only as an "experiment."
000,000 workers.
the .maximum ..in - ..production,
for to lend assistance in a prob­ actually 785,940.
This week, it was revealed the That's at least a million more management must maintain
lem involving Towboatmen, Mr. Meany also submitted a "experiment" has been a spectac­ than the very highest govern­ working conditions conductive to
which problem has ari.sen in the detailed financial report for the ular success. "Business Week," a ment estimate of labor needed employe well-being."
past few months and is due sole­ year, showing receipts of $2,- magazine of industry, far from for the 12 months from July,
—Labor
ly to the war effort and enemy 422,934 and expenditures of $2,- partial to workers, made a
.submarine activities, and
010,029, with a balance on hand checkup and found that workers
WHEREAS, The United States of $1,680,076 at the end of the are flocking into the Boeing plant
ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
•Government has construe ted fiscal year. Receipts and expen­ at so rapid a rate thgt the com­
some 5d0 new tug boats and large ditures are broken down into pany may soon have to put out
WEEK OF SEPT, 27th TO OCT, 8th
numbers of oil barges which are separate and detailed categories. "no help wanted" signs.
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL
to be operated on otir inland
Reports received from affili­ Whereas employment previous­
waterways, and
ated unions showed that they ly was dropping, the company in
SHIPPED
680
344
582
1606
WHEREAS, They have been had paid out a total of $22,965,- three weeks was able to make a
successful in establishing a Tow- 611 in death, sick, unemploy­ net gain in its rolls of 1,518
REGISTERED
530
397
380
1307
boatmen's Union in New Orleans, ment, dir ability and other bene­ workers, and the rate of increase
Louisiana, with some of the ma­ fits to members during the year. is growing each week.

iVfachinists
Return To
Fedemtion

Around The Ports

JhiL. ^tahcA, fiMAAu —

.1 »

Labor Was Right;
Wage Hike Solves
Manpower Needs

I
•

•m
i'l-l

�m- '
Page Four

THE

SEAFARERSLOG

Friday, October 22, 1943

WAR PROFITS GO UP AND UP
Kilgore Report Toes
NMU-Stalinist Line

The table below sets forth a comparison between the wartime profits of twentynine prominent American corporations and the profits they made before the war bo6m'
developed. It is a question of great concern to all Americans whether our distribution
of war income is disproportionately increasing the size of incomes received by wealthy
individuals and large companies.
i
no other branch of wat indus­
•
In
addition,
workers
have
a
(Figues are in thousands of dollars)

I*

IW

{Continued from Page 1)
justified grievance against large
In the case of Russia, shipping try has there been a manpower
Per- First Half 1943 profits at a time when their own
space has been allocated for agency so well equipped to
1936-39
eentage
compared to
incomes have been subjected to
only two-thirds of the muni­ meet its responsibilities. It has
Company
Average
severe
controls .
tions and food promised under done a good job."
American Car ft Foundry
72
$ 7,056
9700 Unavailable
The above quotation on the American Locomotive
the protocal."
1,462
7,552
417
+ 175 Many of the companies listed
The repoi't then goes on and committee's report deals onl;' Atfl^rican Rolling Miii Co
4',346
9,231
114
+ 12 in the table have inultipliedgives a great plug in for the War with the WSA division, headed American Type Founders, Inc. 131
2,161
+ 86 their pre-war profits so rapidly
1550
Shipping Administration. It by Captain Edward Macauley. American Woolen Co
6,824
+ 37 that taxes have been unable to
-—831
states that the WSA should have The committee, in putting a plug Aviation Corp
+ 1 catch up with them. Fourteen of
5,324
—599
charge of all shipping from the in for Captain Macauley's di­ Bath Iron Work
3,743
1340
+ 129 the twenty-nine companies made .
260
factories to the final destination. vision of the WSA, follows the Bendix Aviation Corp
15.890
505
+ 3 ten times as much in 1942, be­
2,627
It blasts the Army and other usual line that is carried in the Bethlehem Steel Corp
38,188
+ 5 fore taxes, as they averaged, in
98
19,269
government agencies, and throws Pilot.
+ 34 1936-39. Almost all multiplied
2,276
81
Blaw Knox Co.
1,257
When a fisherman who knows
Orchids at the WSA.
+ 17 their pre-war income, before tax­
9,716
74
Borg-Warner Corp
5,585
he
Then the East Coast Long­ his business goes fishing,
5,222
2113
—35 es, by four. In several cases the
Budd (Edw. G.) Mfg. Co
236
shoremen are taken over the would use the bait most appro­ Crosley Corp
i:738
574
^599 percentage increase was num­
258
hurdles, and the set-up on the priate for the fish that he intends Crucible Steel Co. of Am.
8,308
337
—3 bered in the thousands. Inas­
1.901
West Coast under the domination to catch. In the final analysis of Fairfield Aviation
+ 23 much as a corporation may not
1,131
313
274
of Hdrry Bridges is given the the report, it boils down to these
62.081
41
—11 be required to pay a tax in ex-''
General Electric Co
44,115
green iight and is supposed to be simple facts:
11,143
605
—2 cess of 80% of its total profits, a
Jones
ft
Laughlin
1,580
1. The committee went out of
a bed of roses and is recommend­
4,488
—5 1000% increase in profit, before
624
Mack
Trucks,
Inc
620
ed for the East Coast. However, thpir way to lay the ground­
9,659
363
Unavailable
taxes, leaves the company with
Martin
(Glenn
L.)
Co
2,084
in regards to the wage question work on the Commies argument
+ 46 double its normal income.
5,273
96
Otis
Elevator
Co
2,696
no mention is made that Harry for a second front. Which was
173
—19
17,042
6.232
Bridges is pleading that the picked up and published in the Pullman, Inc
+
91
7.354
521
1,185
Ship Built By AFL Meh
wages of the East Coast Long­ Daily Worker the same day that Remington Arms Co., Inc
—26
20,187
248
Republican
Steel
Corp
5,801
shoremen are receiving are high­ the committee's report was made
Presented
To Chinese
+ 77
99
7,945
Sperry Corp
3,986
er than the West Coast and that public.
+ 152
2,548
145
1,040
2. The plug for the WSA, and Studebaker Corp
they should be granted an in­
+ 47 RICHMOND, CALIF. — The
307
20,994
United
Aircraft
Corp
5,161
crease. This is being done under when mention is made regarding
115 Unavailable United'States has transferred to
96,819
45,098
the usual ballyhoo of stabiliza­ the WSA it means Captains Mac­ United States Steel Corp
+ 86 the Chinese government a Lib­
45
21,216
14,674
auley's division, certainly fur­ Westinghouse Mfg. Co
tion.
—6 erty Ship built here at the Per100
13,564
The Merchant seamen are then ther leads us into the belief that Youngslown Sheet ft Tube Co. 6,785
manente Metals Corp. yard by
given a flock of orchids, but it the Captain's division has and is mary" will analyze the election ing on the above mentioned let­ AFL workers. The ship, named
is interesting to note in what di­ playing ball with the Commies returns at a meeting of Labor's terhead with Athern were — for Generalissimo Chiang Kaiof the NMU.
rection the_ line runs.
Louise Bransten, Germaino shek, "was presented to Chinese
Non-Partisan League's club.
"The men who man our mer­ 3. The plug regarding the West
Bulcke, J. Vernon Burke, Revels representatives by Edward R.
chant ships are doing a magni­ Coast longshoremen, under the 6/21/40 i,s.sue of the San Fran­ Cayton, Rikc-e R. Elesser, Lou Stettinius, Jr., Lend-Lease Ad­
ficent job. The crews are ef­ Control of Harry Bridges, and cisco Chronicle named him as a Goldblatt, Sam Jaye, Alex Noral. ministrator. It will enter the
ficient and their morale is the particular stress laid on the sponsor of the "Peace Ballot' All the others appearing on the trans-Pacific trade as a training
high. Adequate number of sea­ NMU activities in this war, lead conducted by the San Francisco letterhead are active fellow vessel for merchant seamen.
men have volunteered or have us to the following conclusions: Coordinating Council for Peace, travelers, known to us here in
been recruited so that ships That some members on the which was branded by the West the Bay area as such."
all as I suggested. Further,
sail fully manned and with staff of the committee are either Coast police as Stalinist in­
Plunkert reported weekly, durspired.
Affidavit of Arthur James
only negligible delays. The Commies or fellow-travelers.
ng the legislative session, to the
Mr. Harper L. Knowles, Chair­ Kent, County of Los Angeles, tops fraction of the Communist
number of seamen on Ameri­ The report states that Henry
can ships has nearly doubled H. Collins, Jr., is the executive man of the radical research com­ State of California, to the Con­ Party," namely, Schneiderman,
.in the last year. There have secretary; other staff members mittee of the American Legion, gressional Committee on Un- Spector or Gannet, Athern and
been no strikes. Discipline has included Lincoln Fairley and Department of California, testi­ American activities, dated 11/2/38 myself." (Hearings, pages 2983been excellent in spite of the Leigh Athern. These three staff fying before an executive hearing* —(Excerpts from this affidavit 2984).
difficult living and working members are cited by the attor­ of the Congressional committee are as follows) "1 make this af­
Henry H. Collins, Jr., Washing­
conditions imposed by wartime ney general as being members on Un-American activities at fidavit voluntarily, at my own
conditions. Despite high casu­ and sponsors of subversive set­ San Francisco, Cal., on 8/2#/40; initiative. In the years 1932-33- ton Committee for Democratic
alties from enemy attacks, la­ ups fronting and controlled by (Executive hearings, page 1496 34-35-36 and until Sept., 1937, 1 Action. National Federation for
was a member of the Commun­ Constitutional Liberties, Panel
bor turnover has been lower the Communist Party. Leigh and 1497).
than in war industries ashore. Athern was connected with the THE CHAIRMAN — "Do you ist Party; and in the years 1936- member at conference—^DescendAmerican seamen have deliv­ "YANKS ARE NOT COMING" know any other official whose 37 1 was a membership director ents of the American Revolution,
ered the goods."
movement on the Pacific Coast. name is on this letterhead who is of the Communist Party at San Member National Council.
From the above it would seem And that, my friends, is how a member of the Communist- Francisco, and in charge of po­
Marian Anderson Citizens*
that the seamen are at last get­ Russia operates.
Party — Mary Moore, for in­ litical activity of the Party. I Committee — Member, Forest
was
personally
acquainted
with
ting credit from a government
stance?"
Glen Md. . American Committee
committee on the splendid work HERE'S THE RECORD
Mr. Knowles—^"I am not in a the leading members of the Com­ for protection of Foreign Born-r
that they are doing. However,
position to verify her member­ munist Party in California in Member, board of directors.
ON
MEMBERS
OF
THE
' there is a reason for the above
ship in the party. You are look­ those years. For almost a year
KILGORE COMM.
build-up, and here it is.
Lincoln Farley, member Wash­
ing at the face of the letterhead. prior to June 1937, a strategy
"American seamen are he­
On the reverse side ai'e other committee of the Communist ington Book shop, cited as a C.P.
roes. Thousands have died LEIGH, ATHERN — Graduate names. Dr. Thomas Addis is a Party would meet with certain front by the Attorney General.
under bombardment and tor­ of University of California and known commuhist; Leigh Athern members of the California Legis­
Member, American League for
lature, and sometimes also with
pedo attack. They and their Harvard Law School. In 1938-39, is a known communist."
other
sympathetic
persons
who!
Peace
and Democracy, cited a? t|
Attorney
for
Lafollette
Commit­
' organizations, particularly the
Mr. Stedman —"Wasn't Leigh
'
"
•
a
C.P.
front by the Attorney'
were
not
actual
membei-s
of
the
tee
hearings
in
California.
In
National Maritime Union, have
Athern attorney for the LaFolGeneral.
•
Party.
1939,
labor
relations
counsel
and
" acquitted ^themselves with hon­
lette committee on the Pacific
or. The appreciation of Ihe administrative assistant, Cali­ Coast?"
1 was also ,in 1936-37, fraction
The above persons; Henry H.
fornia State Relief AdministraAmerican people is theirs.'
Mr. Knowles—"He was inves­ secretary of the conference for Collins, Jr., Leigh Athern and
Well, there, you have it, no' tion. January, 1941 to date, prin- tigator ' for the LaFollette Com­ progressive political action, the Lincoln Farley, are staff mem­
•mention is" made of the AFL cipal Attorney, Office of Price mittee in their California hear­ fraction being all party members bers of the Subcommittee to in­
-Unions. The committee put a , Administration,'Washington, D.C, ings, and according to informa­ in,various Caiifornia Cities who vestigate the National Defense
•plug in for the unions affiliated j The Western Worker 2/11/37 tion supplied me, was active in were leaders in political action. program. ' .
. ;
with the CIO, and praises in shows him a member of the Citi- gathering official information. As such secretary, I was instruct­
-particular the NMU. Now let's [ zens Committee for Repeal of the That is, information in offcial ed by the leaders of the com­ The Chairman of the Commit­
see what the committee's views San Francisco Anti-Picketing Gr­ files for the committee and also munist party — Schneiderman, tee is the Hon. Harley M. Kil­
ave on the WSA.
dance. Notice of a meeting of the the Communist Party. Much of Spector, or Gannett, what legis­ gore, Senator from West Virginia
"The War Shipping Admin­ People's Legislative Conference, the material that , he covered lative bills were to be pushed and on October 7, 1943 SubcomI istration, in the office of the held 2/27/37, named Athern as during his' investigation showed and by whom; then I would con­ mitte Report No. 3 was Submit­
deputy administrator for labor Secretary.
up in communist literature. For tact Leigh Athern, official secre­ ted to Congress, on Mobilization
^
gelations, manning, training Articles appearing in Peoples instance, in the Harry Bridges tary of the conference, and he of Shipping Resources.
and recruitment has been op- World, 5/14/40 stated Athern, a deportation trial."
f.
would contact those assembly­
erating an adequate recruit- j delegate on Ellis Patterson's slate
Keep In Touch With"Other known Communists men, or Plunkert would do so, or
ment and training program. In in the "recent presidential pri­ mentioned by Mr, Knowles as be­ Leo Geyer would contact them, Your Local Draft Board,
i;

5b •.

A

•K'y •

. •&lt;

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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
GULF ORGANIZING DRIVE PLANNED BY SEAFARERS &amp; AFL&#13;
KILGORE REPORT TOES NMU-STALINIST LINE&#13;
SAVANNAH BRANCH WINS FIGHT TO CREW SHIPS NAMED FOR AFL MEN&#13;
LABOR WAS RIGHT; WAGE HIKE SOLVES MANPOWER NEEDS&#13;
CREW DENOUNCED SLOP CHEST CHISEL&#13;
NEW INSIGNIA FOR MERCHANT SEAMEN&#13;
MACHINISTS RETURN TO FEDERATION&#13;
AFL MEMBERSHIP SHOWS BIG GAIN&#13;
LABOR WAS RIGHT; WAGE HIKE SOLVES MANPOWER NEEDS&#13;
MANPOWER PROBLEM EXAGGERATED IN ORDER TO SMEAR AMERICAN LABOR&#13;
WAR PROFITS GO UP AND UP&#13;
SHIP BUILT BY AFL MEN PRESENTED TO CHINESE&#13;
HERE'S THE RECORD ON MEMBERS OF THE KILGORE COMM.</text>
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                    <text>•m

eiii;;-',:

EXPOSED!

JOQ

^•

(XFFIOIAL ORGAN OP THE ATLANTIC AND GULP DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
VOL. V.

!»•

NEW YORK. N. Y„ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29. 1943

No. 30

SIU Fights Aimy
Jurisdiction Grab
Over Union Men
Brother Lawrence McCune is in the Army stockade at Camp Patrick Henry,
Hampton Roads, Virginia, and is facing an army court martial for alleged violations of
articles. This case, which is being foRght by the union to the hilt, may well set an im­
portant precident, determining whether or not the brass hats can supercede the jurisdic­
tion of the Coast Guard and civil courts, and jerk seamen around on whim.
McCune, a chief-cook, is under
technical charges of desertion
(pretty stiff charges considering
all the circumstances surround­
ing the case). In the past all
such cases have come before the
Coast Guard hearing officers, and
a union representative was al­
lowed to be present and aid in
the defense. McCune, however,
was arrested by M.P.'s and
thrown into an Army stockade
and faced with a military court
martial.
^ The brass hats contend that the
ship was carrying supplies for the
armed forces, and therefore the
personnel of the ship came under
their jurisdiction. Since hundreds
of thousands of workers through­
out the country are engaged in
producing supplies for the armed
forces, the Army reasoning could
well be applied to them arid alfnost the entire civilian popula­
tion of the country be placed un­
der a military dictatorship. Thus
the case is of extreme importance
to the entire labor movement.
The SIU has engaged an at­
torney to represent Brother Mc­
Cune and is fighting to have the
case removed from the jurisdic­
tion of the Army and returned
to the Coast Guard. Attorney C.

Dodson Morrisette has written
to headquarters, outlining the de­
tails of the case. His letter reads
(in part):

Fishermen
Vote Strike!

The facts as admited by Mc­
Cune are that he did. on
Members of the Atlantic Fish­
(
). 1943. after hav­
ing been informed by the rep­ ermen's Union, SIU, voted over­
resentative of your Union in whelmingly last week to call a
Norfolk that the vessel strike in their dispute with
This photo is proof of a fact well known to seamen—
(
) was in need of a wholesale buyers and the OPA
Craig
Vincent. New York head of the RMO. is a fellowover
the
price
of
their
catch.
chief cook, report to the vessel
traveler
of the Communist Party. He is shown here address­
Around
1,000
fishermen
in
the
which was then docked at the
ing.
on
Sept.
14. 1941. a mass meeting sponsored by the
New
England
area
have
thus
Army Base and thereupon as­
"Citizens'
Committee
Against Police Brutality." in Wash­
served
notice
that
they
don't
in­
sumed his duties as chief cook.
ington.
D.
C.
This
"committee"
was a Stalinist front organi­
tend
to
continue
fishing
when
Subsequently he signed Ar­
zation. and you can bet that slick Mr. Vincent was no
ticles of Agreement in which the price of their catch, arbitrar­
innocsnt that was sucked. in._ Vincent's record in the RMO .
if was provided that he agreed ily set by tbo OPA in-coUucinn
is one of pro-NMU maneuvers in which he goes down the
to go as a member of the crew with the wholesalers, is insuffi­
line with all the union-busting schemes cooked up by the
cient
to
meet
the
rising
cost
of
of the vessel for a period not
Stalinist 13th Street machine. For a full expose of his role,
exceeding 12 months, to living.
read the SEAFARERS LOG of October 22. and Dushane's
Charles
T.
Douds,
regional
di­
(
). as the master of
"Report
From Washington" on page three of this issue.
said vessel or the United rector of the National Labor Re­
State Government or any lations Board, supetvised the
agent or department thereof. strike vote under the provisions
might direct. On (
) of the Smith-Connally Act. Under
approximately 500 sol­ the provisions of the act, the
diers appeared and boarded men are now free to strike, hav­
the vessel, and McCune was ing undergone the "30 day cooi­
ordered to prepare supper for ng off period."
One of the recommendations slipped into the Kilgore
The union, through its Presi­
these soldiers, in addition to
dent,
Pat
McHugh,
is
in
the
(Committee's
report on the maritime industry was that sea­
the regular crew of the vessel.
meantime,
continuing
efforts
to
men be frozen to their ships for the duration of the war.
He did prepare supper and resettle the dispute without inter­ This union-busting proposal has received the silent treat­
{Confinued on Page 2)
ruption of work.

Vice Rresidenf Isidore Nagler of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union. AFL
delegate to the recent British Trades Union Congress, took advantage of his stay in London
to visit the Merchant Navy Club, a gift of the ILGWU to British seamen. He is shown at the
club standing beside Frieda S. Miller, former New York labor commissioner, now associated
with the U. S. embassy in London.

••

sv- •''

Kilgore Opens Drive To
Freeze Men To The Ships

ment by the shipowner press—apparently in the hope that

it could be smuggled through be-*
fore the unions were aware of ism is and what it can do for
what was up. The SlU-SUP is them. Dues, the life's blood of
fully aware of the maneuver, organized labor, would fall off.
and determined to fight it to the And by the time the war ended
and the men were unfrozen, the
end.
Kilgore dresses up his proposal unions could conceivably be in
with a lot of patriotic talk about such weakened conditions that
the necessity of keeping the they would, be easy pickings for
ships manned. The truth of the the inevitable shipowner post­
matter is that the ships are being war campaign of terrorism.
That's the black side of the
manned, and Kilgore's proposal
picture.
That's what could hajpis aimed primarily at smashing
pen—that's
what the shipowners
the unions which maintain a de­
hope
will
happen.
But that is just
cent level of wages and condit­
what
isn't
going
to
happen if the
ions.
Once men are frozen to their SIU-SUP can prevent it.
Maritime unions have re­
ships it is obvious that their
union would have the greatest ceived blows at the hands of the
difficulty in protecting their shipowners and government that
rights. Shipowners would feel would have been fatal to unions
free to chisel overtime (or even composed of less steadfast and
eliminate it), they could break militant men. The seamen know
watches at will, they could from bitter experience what it
lengthen hours and sabotage the means to be placed at the mercy
conditions—and the men would,of the shipowner without a union
be frozen to their jobs and all for protection, and they are de­
but powerless to protect them­ termined not to let it happen
again.
selves.
. The great infiux of new men So far this move is only on pa­
into the industry would have no per in the Kilgore report. The
opportunity to learn what union{Continued on Page 4)

�THE

' Page Two

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, Oclober 29, 1943 ^

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

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

HARRY LUNDEBERG

------ Vresident

110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

_

_

i. -

-

-

-

Secy-TretK*

F. O. Bdx i5. Station P., T&lt;[e^ York Qty

MATTHEW DUSHANE

-

- J- Washington Rep&lt;.

424 Jth Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
»

w

•

directory of Branches
ADDRESS

BRANCH

PHONE

.,. BOwIing Green 9-3437
2 Stone St
NEW YORK (4)
.330 Atlantic Ave.... ... Liberty 4057
BOSTON (10)
....Calvert
4539
.14
North
Gay
St....
BALTIMORE (2)
Lombard 7651
.6 North 6th St. ...
PHILADELPHIA
25 Commercial PI... ...Norfolk 4-1083
NORFOLK
...Canal 3336
NEW ORLEANS (16) . .309 Chartres St
.218
East Bay St.... ...Savannah 3-1728
SAVANNAH
... Tampa MM-1323
.423 East Piatt St.
TAMPA
55 So. Conception St... ...Dial 2-1392
MOBILE
.. .Puerto de Tierra
.45 Ponce de Leon
PUERTO RICO
..Galveston 2-8043
.219 20th Street
GALVESTON
.. Ft. Lauderdale 1601
.2021
S.
Federal
Highway.
FT. LAUDERDALE

PUBLICATION OFFICE;
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8346
267

Committee Certifies
Nominations For '44

....
FepeifATeo p/tess

Forty members of the Atlantic &amp; Gulf District will
run for union office in the 1944 elections to be held during
November and December. This Was revealed this week
when the Credentials C()mmittee released its final report
—wnU-

Jurisdiction Grab

"clnrc tiic -ccTiivirUutcs listed Ucluw fulfilled tlic

requirements of office as laid^down in the constitution. Here
NORFOLK AGENT
is the line-up of candidates as
Charles C. Martin
they will appear on the ballot:
Martin Trainor
James L.. Tucker

SECRETARY - TREASURER
John Hawk

NEW YORK AGENT
L. J. (Baldy) Bollinger
Paul L. Hall
Frank Williams
NEW YORK
DECK PATROLMAN
Louis Coffin
James F. Sheehan
NEW YORK
ENGINE PATROLMAN
Joe Volpian

IS'

NEW YORK
STEWARD PATROLMAN
Maurice Burnstine
Jack Cooper Ccise
Claude Fisher
William Hamilton
Fred Hart

lii

I f;'--

BOSTON AGENT
John Mogan
BOSTON
JOINT PATROLMAN
Joseph Lapham
PHILADELPHIA AGENT
Harry J. Collins

NORFOLK PATROLMAN
Paul Ambrose
SAVANNAH AGENT
Charles B. Martin
John P. Ryan
James F. Sharkey
Charles Waid
Thomas Wilhelm
TAMPA AGENT
D. L. Parker
Steely White
MOBILE AGENT
Olden Banks
NEW ORLEANS AGENT
C. J. (Buck) Stephens
NEV/ORLEANS PATROLMAN
. James J. DeVito
. Ted R. Terrington
GALVESTON AGENT
Ray W. Sweeney
E. R. Wallace
PUERTO RICO AGENT
Daniel Butts

BALTIMORE A(3ENT
Joseph Flanagan
John Kupta
Carl M. (New Orleans)
Rogers

The Credentials Committee an­
nounced that it had made a com­
plete record of the discharges
sent in by nominees, and that
this record would be kept on file,
at headquarters.

BALTIMORE PATROLMAN
Max A. Beck
Rekfoird Ditrkroy
HkiheW Little
'
James T. McCauUey

Brothers Charles Medford, Ed­
ward Allen, William Johnson,
and James Carroll were disquali­
fied because of insufficient sea'
time in the discharges submitted.

&lt; V-

{Continued from Page 1)
ported to the officer in charge
of the soldiers that supper was
ready, he not having at that
time prepared supper for the
crew which, of course, he had
to do. He was then informed
that the soldiers could not eat
until the colonel who was evi­
dently to sail on the vessel,
had eaten, whereupon McCune
became dissatisfied and asked
the master of the vessel for a
release. The master at that
lime being engaged in prepar­
ing to move the vessel. from
the pier out into the stream,
replied that he could not then
give McCune his release,
whereupon McCune threw his
baggage over on the dock and
then jumped from fhe vessel
on to the dock, the vessel at
that time having moved a few
feet away from the dock. Mc­
Cune was then arrested and
taken to the officer in charge
of the guard, and upon being
questioned about the matter,
finally gave a written state­
ment setting out briefly the
facts above related^ and furth­
er that he was deserting the
The Court became very
much interested in the point
of law involved in thU matter,
the same being the question of
the jurisdiction over SicCune)
and has taken the ihatter un­
der advisemehf, pehdihg filing
Of bti'efs by counsel tor Mc­
Cune and by the Government.
The Army evidently is much
concerned with McCune's case.
In addition io the United
Slates Attorney for this dis­

.r*"
- r':,l:' v
,

• 'w ; .1-

•}. ' •••

trict, there appeared on be­
half of the Governihent, Col­
onel Archibald King, who is
with the Legal Office of the
War Department in Washing­
ton, D. C., and who argued
.this matter on behalf of the
Governihent.
As I have staled above, the
Court has not rendered a de
cision and, of course, will not
until briefs have been filed.
As soon as I have prepared
my brief, i will send you a
copy.
The question of requiring a
stifward's department equipped
to serve a crew of 78, to serve
500 soldiers, is a shipowner chisel
which the union has been fight­
ing for some time. A solution to
this problem is near — but not
near enough to help McCune
when he was suddenly faced with
preparing 500 meals in a galley
and with a staff equipped to pre­
pare 78 meals.
Then the picture of 500 meals
ready and hot, and 500 soldiers
hungry and ready to eat, and the
service being held up because
the brass hat ha!d failed to show
up and had to be served first, is
a sickening specticai—to say the
least. One can well uhderstahd
how McCune blew his top.
Whatever the mitigating cir­
cumstances, 'however, the fight
how is to have his case heard by
the regular Coast Guard panel,
and to prevent the ehcroachmeht
upon our rights by the bureau­
cratic labor hating brass hats.

Kei^p In Touch With
Your Local Draft Board.

NEW BRITISH SHiRS.
RECEIVE PRAISE
Indications are that the new
British emergency cargo carrier
which was launched recently is
expected to become a standard
for forthcoming mercihant'vessels
and will sail at a speed of fifteen
knots.
The ship is of the closed deck
type and there are three decks,
upper, main and second with the
main deck specially constructed
for heavy cargo. Deadweight
tonnage is 12,000 tons; gross
about 9,900 and net 7,150.
Boilers and engines are housed
together. The boilers have a pres­
sure of 450 pounds per square
inch with a temperature of 750
degrees Fahrenheit super-heate&lt;L
There is a Cochrane's boiler in
the engine room for domestic
heating. Natural air ventilation ''
is provided. Three Diesel gener­
ators have a 175 k. w. out{&gt;ut.
The arrangement of water-tube
boilers ahd turbines of a modem
but simple design is a feature of
the earlier vessels of the series,
but in some of the -later vessels
the propelling machinery will
consi.st of Diesel engine.s.
The deck macihinery is electric­
ally driven. There are - twelve
five-ton derricks and six ten-t()n
derricks. Ah eighty-ton derrick
is on the mainmast and a thirtyton on the jigger mast. Derricks
can be changed from one side of
the vessel to ahotlier, and by the
ttieans of geared winches, the
five or ten-tbnners Can be coupl­
ed with the eighty, fifty ot thirty
as required.

• "'I.V

�Friday, Ociober 29, 1943

THE

Allied Air Blows Bring
Nazi Shipping Tangle
By KURT SINGER
(The author of this ariible,
written especially fotr the SEA­
FARERS LOG, ik a promiheht
European journalist. He is authfar of "Duel For the Northland;
"Goring," etc).
Even the ingenuity of Dr. Jo• seph Goebbels was taxed away
during recent months when he
/ had to explain away the drop in
sinkings by submarines. As Gerthahs have only recently heard
abbUl their own shipping short­
ed, the job was doubly difficult.
It was tight-lipped, tall and
arrogant Karl Kauffmann, the
• "Gauleiter" of Hamburg and the
Reich Commissioner for Ship­
ping and ex-leader of the 19^3
• saboteurs, who astonished the
Reich with the news that the
shipping shortage was so serious
"as to put the interests of GerI many at stake."
BOMBS EFFECTIVE
The deadly e'ffect of the Allied
air war on German shipping was
for the first time disclosed to the
German public in the "Hambur,ger Fremdenblatt" when Rear
Admiral von Lohmann announc­
ed that only 2,000,000 tons of
shipping entered Norweigian
ports in 1942, and Baltic traffic in
the same year amounted to 26,000,000 tons. (As Germany's to­
tal pre-war merchant fleet was

4,100,000 tons, it ^^ould show that
the saiiie ships frequently make
the round trip.)
All this shipping is top-class
priority; 19,000,000 tons are used
to bring Swedish iron-ore to Ger­
many and take coal and coke to
Sweden, Norway, Denmark and
Finland. The remainder is used
for military supplies and food
necessary to hold down Norway
and Finland.
The RAF and the American
flying fortresses had a first-class
opportunity to hit this iron-ore
and coal traffic routed in the
traditional way from Lulea in
Sweden and Narvik in Norway
to Rotterdam for trans-shipment
on Rhine barges .or from the
Swedish Oxelosuhd to the Pom­
eranian cities of Stettin and Ros­
tock.
Bombing of German costal
shipping has forced the Nazi
shipping authorities to transfer a
large proportion of the traffic to
the port Qf Emden, a considerable
Allied bombing victory, which
may have important repercus­
sions in the Reich.
2nd RATE PORTS
Emden's port facilities are not
nearly as good as those of Rot­
terdam. It means also longer
barge hauls to and from the
Ruhr, and an extra burden im­
posed on the already strained
{Continued on Page 4)

^Around ThePorts

SEAFARERS

LOG

OI\

t V

^WASHinOTOIV
In my last report certain parts
of the Kilgore report were
brought to the attentiwi of the
membership. There is one more
part that needs special cotisideratibn. The report stated "The
thitd limitation on mannihg has
been the reluctance to modify
traditional peacetime employ­
ment uncertainties. Employment
oh merchant vessels is still cas­
ual, insecure emploment; men
haVe signed on for the duration
of one voyage only. This tradi­
tional practice of the sea dates
from the days of long sailing
voyages. Even in 1937 the ~Maritithe Commission pointed out
where there was no justification
for its continuance. It is particu­
larly wasteful in wartime."
The WSA has been trying to
pressure the SUP and SIU to
have ships crews sign on" for the
duration of the war. Some of
the WSA officials have modified
this to two years. The Ni^U of­
ficials have indicated that they
are willing to go along with this
scheme.
Of course the NMU has a mo­
tive behind this proposal. At
this time they are trying to get
the employers to agree to the
check-off system. "What a gravy
train they would have if they
could get a government directive
out, whereby all ships crews
would be compelled to sign on
for the duration of the war, or
for a period of two years, and
along with this have the check­
off system.
Every person signing on a ship
that the NMU has under contract
would them be compelled to pay
dues for the termination of the
ships articles, (duration of the
war, or for a period of two years).
They would then become chattel
slaves of the NMU.
All in all, the Kilgore Commit­
tee's report closely follows the
line that the NMU has been ad­
vocating. The recommendations
are similiar to the NMU's stand
regarding the WSA. It has been
reported that three members on
the staff of the Kilgore commit­
tee, have been cited' as belonging

der contract to use the check-off
system to get your dues. The day
Things are booming as far as is coming, and it is not far off,
shipping goes down here in Tex- when the rank and file of the
i as, I had the pleasure ^of paying NMU will want an accounting of
off an SUP ship in Lake Charles what , is to be done with the top
the other day. It was one of the fraction officials of the NMU who
best crews that I have run across have -not the strength or courage
in a long time. The men were to negotiate an agreement to the
signed on 9 months articles to same level as the other maritime
'pay off on the Pacific Coast. They unions in the field. They,are not
were out a little over four interested enough in the mem­
: months. I contacted the Captain bers interest, they are butting in­
, along with the delegate, stating to everything under the sun, but
that the men were entitled to the vital point of the member's
$92.50 back .to the coast. He said wages, security watches, trans­
no dice until the Articles ran out. portation clause in articles and
We got the deck crew together good working conditions."
and it was thrashed out that
Proof: Every day in this hall
when the cargo was out, that was there are NMU men coming in TRAINING PROGRAM
the end of the articles. The men turning in their books, and who
agreed to stay aboard until the are thoroughly disgusted with FOR DISABLED
SEAMEN.
cargo was out of the ship if it the set-up in the NMU.
took a month. Result with soli­ There is some baggage that
darity of the crew sticking to­ was given to me in Lake Charles WASHINGTON — The W^ar
gether, I obtained the $92.50 for by the delegate, which belongs Shipping Administration an­
them. Three trip card men to Christion Helgeson, SUP trip nounces it has embarked upon a
aboard that were recommended card who got drunk in the Canal program to employ and train vet­
for books.
and was left behind and did not erans and merchant seamen dis­
The situation in manning SIU prove himself a good shipmate. charged as a result of combat or
contract ship in Texas ports is
service disabilities. This is one
Well, according to the Pilot of the first practical plans for the
getting serious. I have to call on
the RMO for men. I sure am get­ the comrades are running Mike training and hiring uhder Civil
ting .some dandies,' who are sent Quill for City Council in New Service of ex-service men of the
York and over in Frisco they are present war.
tight back aglin.
j
Well, as I predicted some time running another great commie, The men will be trained to
I ago in the LOG, the shipowners Olleta O'Connor Yates for City work as examiners in ship repair
)!yould turn the NMU down cold Supervisor. So all of you broth­ yards performing services re­
turkey when it came time to ne- ers in New York and Frisco be quired in connection with inspec­
j gotiate for the same wages, over- sure and vote for these working tion, supervision and cost control
I time and working conditions that men's friends. You hever can tell of repairs oil American merchhnt
i tve in the SIU and the SUP are when the savior of the seamen. vessels. Since August, 68 men
! enjoying. Your agreements were Can't - Go - Ashore - Curran, will have been trained and placed on
' hegotiated by fighters, and not run for president of the U.S. and jobs in various shipyards.
; handshakers and oppertunist and if elected, our troubles and wor­
! .^your duos are not $2.50 per, and ries are- over. It's right in the
Keep In Touch With
' Vour organization has not asked bag.
I the shipov/ners that we have un­
E. R. WALLACE, Agent Your Local Draft Board.

GALVESTON

Pags Hire* ^

to organizations which the attor­ would-be political commissar and
ney general has cited as subver­ pink Empire builder, could thea '
sive (Commie fronts and spon­ be in a position to push the com­
sored). It is rumored that other mie policy, with the assistance of
members of the staff are in the the NMU? It is also rumored
same boat. The GARBAGE in that other members on the staff
that report carries a stench from of the RMO in the port of New
the pages of the NMU Pilot.
York are known to follow the
On the basis of the report, it commie line. It's high time that
became apparent that some staff Captain Macauley, who is direct­
members of the WSA are also ly responsible for the operation
connected with commie front or­ of the RMO, cleaned house. We
ganizations. For some time the would like an answer from both!
worst sore spot in the WSA that Captain Macauley and Dimock
the SUP and SIU have had to on this matter. Is it their inten­
contend with has been with the tion to have the largest port ini
staff of the WSA in the port of the United States controlled by
would - be political commissars
New York.
and
pink Empire builders?
It.is from this port that all the
trouble regarding the question of
INTERNAL REVElfuE
discrimination has originated.
Attended a conference during
The rumors -are that RMO's re­ the week regarding the 2% so­
gional director in New York, Mr. cial security tax after January
Craig Vincent, is the cheer lead­ 1st, 1944. The shipowners pro­
er for the NMU, and has been posed that they be allowed to de­
pushing the commie line on dis­ duct the 2% on all ships that pay
crimination and is trying to com­ off after 1-1-44, regardless of the
pel the SUP and SIU to checker­ wages that were earned in 1943.
board their crews.
Under the Social Security law a
A report in the Washington person can only receive credit
Daily News of December 13-14- for $3,000 in one year. If the in­
15, 1940, states that at the CIO ternal revenue bureau allows the
convention in Hagerstov/n, Md,, shipowner to deduct the 2% on
Craig Vincent was floor leader wages earned in 1943 after the
for the commie faction. It is also termination of the voyage in
reported that he was connected 1944, all seamen would then have
with the "AMERICAN LEAGUE to file a claim for a refund on
FOR PEACE AND DEMOC­ all deductions made for social
RACY," (Prior to Hitler's attack security that exceeded $30.00 for
on Russia this is the outfit that that year or 1% of three thous­
was shouting it was an imper- and dollars.
Example: A seaman ships out
alist war). He was also a mem­
ber of the provisional committee, on a ship in January 1, 1943 and
Washington Committee for Dem­ he paid off say in November 1,
ocratic rights — Member of the 1943. Say his earnings including
Washington book shop (Commie his board and room amounted to
set-up). These organizations have $2,500. His S.S. deductions would
been cited as subversive by the be 1% or $25.00.
If he .shipped out within the
Attorney General.
He addressed a demonslra- same year with another company
tion aginst police brutality in and .would . pay off 1-1-44, and
Washington on 9-14-41, under his earnings exceeded $500, the
the auspicies of Citizen's Com­ company would deduct 1%.
mittee Against Police Brutality However, the person is entitled
to all payments made over $30.00
(Commie set-up).
in
any one year. The companies
The wife of Craig Vincent.
claim
that they haven't the office
Joyce Campbell, heads the so­
cial security local of the United help to straighten out the new
Federal Workers Union (CIO) 2% S.S. tax. Suggest that the
in Washington, D. C. This out­ Union have the auditor write an
fit is reported to follow the article on this matter, so that the
membership will be prepared to
commie line.
Craig Vincent's father is collect any refund that they may
Merle Vincent, head of the be entitled to.
hour and wage division depart­
WAR MANPOWER
ment of Labor in New York.
COMMISSION
Last February he was cited in
Has issued a new set of regu­
the Congressional • Record and lations regarding certificates of
contributes articles in the Daily availability for seamen and
Worker.
others; also a set of regulations
Marshall R. Dimock, Director on stabilization. Suggest that all
of the RMCK who employed agents contact their nearest WMC
Craig Vincent and asigned him to office and get the following —
the New York region, certainly WMC Field Instruction No. 46,
must have known of Vincent's Bureau of Placement No. 94, dat­
record when he assigned him to ed October 8th, 1943. — WMC
this area.
Manual of Operations Title, 111
Was this a deliberate move on Section 3-7, dated August 16,
the part of Dimock so that this 1943, page 1 to 9.

ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
WEEK OF OCTOBER 11th TO 15th
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL
SHIPPED

346

157

278

REGISTERED

236

196

216

^

781
642

•

•M

�e^jit'*

Page Four

• {{•"
I ** =

THE

SE'^.FARERS

LOG

Friday, October 29, 1943

HAWK ASKS END OF WAGE Allied Air Blows Bring
CHISEL OF TORPEDOED MEN Nazi Shipping Tangle"
October 26, 1943
Maritime War Emergency Board
Direktor in the Ministry ol
{Continued from Page 3)
, Captain Edward Mac|iuley, Chairman
Transport, and head of the ShifiFollowing crew members of and damaged facilities of the ping Office.
Wasjiiiiigton, D. G.
•
'
the
S.S. James Hoban have un­ Dortmund-Ems Canal. Another
Gentlemen:
The "Hamburger Fremdenclaimed
wages wailing for them. drawback is that while Rhine
The stranding of torpedoed seamen on the beach without con­
blatt" reported tnat Bergemann
barges
carry
some
3-4,000
tons
tinuing t^eir wages and cubsistcncc, is a grave injustice iiow being Collect from Waterman S.S. Co.
Emden Canal barges displace was a Civil Service official who
done to these men. This union has repeatedly appealed to your Adams, P. S
$ 8.53
only 1,500 tons. The biggest dif­ specialized in foreign trade and
Board for the correction of this evil.
Allvisi, A. V
.J
8.89 ficulty, however, will be the fact exchange, and implied that he
On July 30, 1942 I received a letter from Mr. Erich Nielsen in
Bailie, H
8.53 that iron ore will enter the Ruhr had little experience in shipping
which he assured me that the Board was considering the problem
8.53 at Dortmund, instead of Duis- matters.
and would soon hand down a ruling to conect the inequality. That Berket, G. W
Bremen's intrigue had succeed­
8.53 burg, where most of the great
was over a year ago, and to date no such ruling has been hamded Canaletti, A
steelworks
are
still
situated.
ed.
A first class-row was on be­
Cur.ran, H
8.53
down.
tween
the contending factions of
Shipping Commissioner KauffMay I call your attention to the latest victims of this practice. Dobson, R. W.
14.22
German
shipping, when Allied
mann's troubles assumed inter­
The (S. S
) sailed from New York on April 1943. She Dunn, L.
3.91
mass
bombardments
destroyed
national
dimensions
when
a
was torpedoed on July 5 and the crew members were repatriated
Evans,
L
4.27
the
harbors
of
Hambuig
and
number
of
Swedish
ships
went
back to New York, arriving on Sept. 26. The Skipper is still abroad
Bremen.
Gotthardt,
B
8.53
down
after
hitting
mines
or
be­
and the Pursur is in South America. The Company refuses to pay
8.53 ing torpedoed by Russian sub­
off the men until either the Pursur or the Skipper arrives with the Hassan, A
i
records. These men are now reduced to living on meager draws and Johnson, R. L
8.5! I marines. The Swedes need coal
badly but they made it very clear
begging in the streets.
Messehauser, O. J.
1.42
that they could not indefinitely
We have repeatedly attempted to negotiate a settlement with
Montemorano, A. M3.91 sustain present losses.
the shipowners, but have been unsuccessful because they maintain
Murphy,
E.
D
8.53
that MWEB rulings prevent them from correcting this situation. The
NO CREWS
8.53
effect of such inhuman practices upon the moral of the men and the Pope, J. M
SALVATORE, FRANK
'
Reynolds, E. R.
8.53
This was only the beginning.
efficient crewing of the ships, is obvious.
Write your mother, she is wor&lt;
I therefore appeal once niore to your Board to make a ruling Rudat, G. '
8.53 As the danger from aerial attacks ried. about you. She is at 185 Baythat the wages of torpedoed seamen and their subsistence shall con­ Taylqr, J.
3,91 grew, Kauffmann found it diffi­ Village, New Bedford, Mass.
tinue until actual time of paying off, and that you make ypur de­ Taylor, J. N.
8.53 cult to get foreign crews. The
#
-K
•«
cision retroactive to cover the crew of this ship. This crew is still Thomas, C. L
8.53 bonus paid to Swedish seameh
The
following
brothers
waiting to be paid off.
'•
Troy, t. G., Ja.
;... 10.31 on-the Rotterdam route increased
have
mail
waiting
for
them
Very truly yours,
300 percent. Finnish sailors in
it
it •
It
in
the
New
York
Hall;
JOHN HAWK
Crew which , paid off the S. S. ships trading in the Baltic get a
Becker, Harry
Marina, Oct. 13, 1943, have 8 bonus of 75 percent, in the Eiiel
Blake, Gilbert D.
hours overtime coming. Collect Canal and the Elbe 100 percent,
Boehin,
John J.
'
in the North Sea 150 percent. In
Bull Line.
Brassard,
Joseph
Holland and France the Nazis
* •
*
Butters, Charles S.
are
trying to get crews by a mix­
Crew which paid off S. S.
Carrol,
Frank
Marymar in Oct. 1943, has $125 ture of coaxing, shanghaiiing and
Chamberlayne,
Frank W.
attack bonus coming. Collect terror; in Norway Kauffmann's
Childers,
L.
L.
agents appl^ pressgang methods,
Therefore, be it resolved, Calmar Line.
{Continued from Page 1)
Christensen, R. Martin
but in vain.
that the Seafarer's Interna­
* • •
WSA has made no move to put
Considine, John
tional Union of North America
Recently, too there has been
it into effect. We serve notice
Crew which paid off S. S. FloCoggins, Jacob H.
•
go on record to oppose such a mar in Oct. 1943, has $125 attack trouble between the. monopolishere and now to all shipowners
Crusenberry, T. E.
move with all its strength, and bonus coming. Collect Calmar tically inclined Hamburg ship­
and government agencies that
'•"sl
Daniels, Rupert
should the WSA attempt to Line.
owners and their rivals in other
any move to freeze the men to
Davis, Ray
impose such slavery upon the
Gefman ports. The mass-bomb­
the ships will be fought with the
Drozda, Mike
seamen,
the Statements of
ing of Hamburg brought disunity
full limit of our strength!
Francis, F.
• • •
Principles and Policy will be
among the German shipowners.
Garth, A. G.
When the Hamburg "Gauleiter"
RESOLUTION PASSED UP
considered violated and the
Gidzinski, John
became Reich Commissioner for
AND DOWN THE COAST
unions no longer bound by its S.S. JOHN PAYNE
Gonzales, Ramon E.
Shipping just over a year ago,
Whereas; the Kilgore Com­
Gonzalez, M. A.
provisions.
Deck Department
$50.00
powerful Hamburg shipowners
mittee's report confined the
Graham, Robert
saw to it that their business con­
following paragraph:
Hamby, Clyde
nections with the Gauleiter were
"The third limitation on man­
Hamilton, Harold
rewarded by adequate preferen­
ning has been the reluctance
Hamilton, Louis E.
to modify traditional peacetial treatment.
-rv 1
Hammond, H. E.
lime employment uncertain­
Hornsby, Guy, Jr.
SHIPOWNER INTRIGUE
ties. Employment on merch­
Jackson, Melvin
ant vessels is still casual, in­
Protests began to pile up. In
Kath, Chas. H.
secure employment; men have
September 1942, Kauffman was
Kornofski, J. R.
signed on for the duration of
forced to declare that although
Kreutz, Herbert R.
one voyage only. This tradi­
le represented Hamburg he
Landron, Juan R.
tional practice of the sea dates
would look after the interests of
Loomis, Verne DeWitt
from the days of long sailing
all shipping circles, in an "objec­
Maddox, Chas. W.
voyages. Even in 1937 the
tive manner." He broke his
Martin, Chas. E.
Maritime Commission pointed
promise. In January 1943, the
Marshall, Andrew
out where there was no justi­
shipowner
Alfred Boehmaker
Rehkoff, Clifford
fication for its continuance. It
called upon his fellow citizens of
Rodriguez, Jose F.
is particularly —wasteful in
Bremen to resist the attempts of
Schuster, Rob
wartime." and
"certain circles" to discourage
Simmons, William F.
Whereas; this Una will be
traffic to Bremen. ,
Stevens, Rob C.
picked up by the shipov/ners
Bickering finally
forced the
Sumski, Ben W.
and the WSA and used in an
Ministry of Transport to step in.
Tanner, Herbert L.
attempt to shackle the seamen
A few wee"ks ago Hamburgers
Teschke, Walter
to their ships for the duration
read in their newspapers that a
Thompson, Preston R.
of the war, or perhaps longer,
certain Dr. Guenther Bergemann
Weston, William
and
had been appointed MinisterialWolfe, Paul
Whereas: such conditions
would mean for the seamen
slavery such as they knew be­
fore the rise of their unions
By observing the following simple Instructions you will
and their ability to bargain
continue to receive deferment from military service. Fall
collectively and protect their
to observe these rules and you may wind up In the army.
economic rights and personal
dignity, and
WHEN SIGNING ON: Give the clerk or skipper all the
Whereas; such a shackling
information necessary to fill out RMO Card No. 47 (Green
of the men to their ships is
Card).
just another reactionary move
WHEN SIGNING OFF: See that Card No. 48-A is propBringing fraternal greetings from British workers,
on the part of the WSA and
perly filled out by skipper or clerk.
William Bayliss (left) of the British Miners Federation told
shipowners in their campaign
the 63rd AFL convention that a strong labor movement is
to smalh labor, knowing that
Ship out before your allotted time ashore has expired.
the surest defense of workers' interests both during the war
no union could function effec­
If you have not yet flUed out the Green Card, contact your
tively if its members were tied
and in the post war world. He is shown with AFL Presi­
draft board and let them know that you are sailing.
dent William Green.
to their jobs.

MONEY DUE

5&gt;tS0H«/s

v;

Kilgore Opens Drive To
Freeze Men To The Ships

Honor Roll

pfc

KEEP CLEAR WITH YOUR DRAFT BOARD

;/».

'v -V'

•:

I

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SIU FIGHTS ARMY JURISDICTION GRAB OVER UNION MEN&#13;
FISHERMEN VOTE STRIKE!&#13;
KILGORE OPENS DRIVE TO FREEZE MEN TO THE SHIPS&#13;
COMMITTEE CERTIFIES NOMINATIONS FOR '44&#13;
NEW BRITISH SHIPS RECEIVE PRAISE&#13;
ALLIED AIR BLOWS BRING NAZI SHIPPING TANGLE&#13;
TRAINING PROGRAM FOR DISABLED SEAMEN&#13;
HAWK ASKS END OF WAGE CHISEL OF TORPEDOED MEN</text>
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                    <text>^J^AKERSJOCJ
OFFICIAL OEGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
VOL.V

NEW YORK, N.Y.. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 5. 1943

No. 31

Chisel Of Torpedo Victims O K
By Nielsen
MEET WITH FDR ON WAGE CRISIS

Merchant seamen, hailed as heroes when they ship oui
but chiseled and exploited when torpedoed and forced t®
appeal to the shipowners for wages and subsistence pending
final pay off time, will continue to be shoyed around by
profit-mad employers if Erich Nielsen has his way. As•suming the authority of the Mar­
itime War Emergency Board,
Nielsen this week rejected the
latest of a series of SIU demands
that wages and subsistence for
torpedoed men be continued af­
ter repatriation and until the
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Presi­ pay off.
dent Roosevelt ordered Secretary
Nielsen is nothing more than
of the Interior Ickes to seize pos­ the office secretary of the MWEB,
session of the nation's coal mines but he acts as if he alone deter­
for the second time this year as mined the Board's anti-labor pol­
threats of a country-wide strike icies. He announced pre-emptorby the United Mine Workers ily on October 29, that "... we
Union reached a climax.
do not believe that any change
...
is called for with regard to
The President called upon
payment
of repatriation benefits
every miner "to return • to work
after
arrival
in the United
without a day's delay" while U.
States."
M. W. officials pondered what ac­
This Nielsen ukase was handed
tion they would take on a War
Labor Board decision in the Il­ down when it had been called to
linois field which was unsatisfac­ his attention that an SIU crew
had been torpedoed, repatriated
tory to the workers.
back to New York, arriving here
The President acted under the on Sept. 26, and to this day has
Connally-Smith War Labor Dis­ not been paid off by the ship­
putes Act which provides harsh owner. For well over a month
penalties for workers who re­ these men have been without
fuse to go to work on properties wages or subsistence and have
seized by the Government.
been forced to panhandle while
the
shipowner liesurely waits for
The American Federation of
Labor members on the War La­ "records to arrive."
Torpedoed seamen are denied
bor Board dissented from the
wages
rightfully due them, forc­
majority decision in a sharply
ed
to
beg, and Nielsen, with a
worded decision which charged
cramped,
bureaucratic mind illthat the ruling had been dictated
suited
to
his ego, does not
by Economic Stabilization Direc­
believe
"any
change is called
tor Vinson and War Mobilization
for!"
Director Byrnes.
Nielsen's letter to the union
The Illinois case hinged on an reads, in part;
agreement entered into between
"We are advised that of the
the mine operators and the union
23
men repatriated after the
in that State. It was regarded as
loss
of this vessel. 9 have been
a test case since for the first time
paid
repatriation wage and
it included a provision with re­
bonus
in full. Of the remain­
gard to portal-to-portal pay sat­
ing
14,
payment of repatriaisfactory to the union.
(Conthmed on Page 4)
The WLB decision awarded an
$8.12V^ daily wage for an eight
and a half hour day but left the Christmas Packages For,
portal-to-portal pay issue still up SIU Prisoners Of War
in the air.
SIU men in Axis prison
The opinion of the AFL mem­
camps
are going to receive a
bers on the WLB said, in part:
Christmas
package froih their
"It is our considered judgment
union
next
month. This was
that the miners should receive
decided
unanimously
by the
$8.50 a day for each straight
membership
up
and
down
time 8^2-hour day worked. For
the
coast
when
it
passed
a
the work week of 40 hours at
resolution
of
good
cheer
and
straight time and 11 hours at
time and a half, the total take- solidarity with the brothers
now imprisoned.
home should be $56.50.
Secretary-Treasurer Hawk
"This decision of the majority is now making arrangements
adds another to the list of de­
with the American Red Cross
cisions which have not been de­ for the sending to each man
termined on the basis of merit,
an 11 pound package Contain­
but rather by the attitude of the ing food, toilet articles and
individuals and government
cigarettes. A full list of SIU
agencies who dominate the ac­
prisoners of war will be pub­
tions of the public members of
lished next week.
the Board."

FDR Again
Seizes Mines

The squeeze between the sky-rocketing cost of living and frozen wages has reduced much of
labor's income to the point that it is difficult to purchase the necessities of life. The miners are
oh-strike, the railroad workers are threatening strike, and millions df other organized workers are
demanding that something be done 4o stop the empid'^^r - government offensive against their
^ standard of living. Pictured here are AFL. CIO and railroad leaders arriving at the White House
last week in the hopes of getting FDR to side with the workers. Front row (left to right): AFL
President William Green, President A. F. Whitney of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen.
New York Regional Director of WMC Anna Rosenberg, CIO President Philip Murray and Sec­
retary-Treasurer of the United Electrical Radio and Machine Workers. ClO. Julius Emspak. Back
row (left to right): AFL Secretary-Treasurer George Meany, President Daniel Tobin of the In­
ternational Brotherhood of Teamsters, AFL, and President R. J. Thomas of the United Auto
Workers. CIO.

S.LU. LICKS SHIPOWNERS'
MOVE TO SHORT CIRCUIT
UNION'S SHIPPING HALLS
The latest maneuver of certain RMO port representatives in their constant war on
organized labor and grab for further jurisdiction, is a move to prevent shipowners from
transporting union seamen from one port to another when a shortage in any given port
holds up crewing of. a vessel. In the past all companies under contract to the SIU had
paid transportation for men when crews were not available in any given port. This
month, however, certain RMO
bureaucrats decided that they
would step in an eliminate this
practice. Their plans were dump­
ed, however, by prompt action
of the SIU.. We won the beef
100%.

11

Some of the shipowners, in
collusion with the RMO, sud­
denly announced last week that
they would not pay transporta­
tion for SIU men, because they
would not be reimbursed by the
government for this money. For
several days last week a ship
was hung up in Norfolk for lack
of men, an(J full SIU replace­
ments were waiting in our-Bal­
timore hall to be transported to
the ship. But thinking more of
Smashing the union than of get­
ting the .^hip sailing with its car­
go of war supplies, the shipown­

er played tough and refused
transportation. It was at , this
spot that the RMO stepped in
and offered to crew the ship
with their school boys.
The union immediately took
this beef to Washington and de­
manded that these chiseling
RMO labor-baiters be set on
their heels. This was done—as
evidence the following telegram
received from Deputy WSA Ad­
ministrator Macauley:
John Hawk,
Secretary-Treasurer,
Seafarers International Union
2 Stone* Street, New York City
Reurtel Oct. 23. Marshall Dimock states no instructions giyen
by RMO regarding reimburse­
ment to operators for transporta­

tion of men. In providing men to
prevent ship delays, RMO sup­
plements unions and operators
and will do nothing to interfere
with provisions of contract or
established practices. The divis­
ion of operations states that spe­
cific authorization of such trans­
portation is not required for
reimbursement of any expenses
so incurred by agents where it is
provided either by collective
bargaining agreement or was
previously established as the
customary practice and that they
always have and will continue
to advise agents accordingly in
accordance with Statements of
Policy signed in May, 1942.
EDWARD MACAULEY,
WSA, Washington, D.C.

�Pag* Two

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

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

HARRY LUNDEBERG

- - - - - - President

110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

P. O. Box 25, Station P., New York City y

MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Rep*
424 5 th Street, N. W., Washingtonr D. C.
•

•

NEW YORK (4)
2 Stone St
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Gay St
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St
NORFOLK
;
25 Commercial PI
NEW ORLEANS (16) ..309 Chartres St
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St
TAMPA
423 East Piatt St..,
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St
PUERTO RICO..«
45 Ponce de Leon
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway. .

"

w

yr

.w

.

INSTBIiCtlOfffi TO VOTEBS — In erdsr lo vol# lor a ecmdldal#, mark a cro#«
IX) to ToUag squaro lo Ui# I«ft ol nam#. U you vols lor a grsatsr numbsr your
vote tor such oiBcs wQl bs lavolld.
*OU MAY WBTIE THE NAME OF ANY MEMBER WHOSE NAME DOES NOT
APPEAR ON THE BAUOt IN THE BLANK UNE PROVIDED FOR THAT FURFbBB UNDER EA(^ OPPICE;

MARK YOUR BAIXOT WITH PEN AND INK OR INDEUBIE PStGU.

)

SECRETAHY-TREASURER
VeielerOae

JOHN HAWK, Na 2212

•

BOwling Green 9-3437
Liberty 4057
Calvert 4539
Lombard 7651
Norfolk 4-1083
Canal 3336
Savannah 3-1728
Tampa MM-1323
Dial 2-1392
.Puerto de Tierra
Galveston 2-8043
. Ft. Lauderdale 1601

PUBLICATION OFFICE;
RobM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8346

JOHN MOGAN, No. 2l6

BOSTON -TOINT BATROLMAN
^

•

Vote lor One

JOSEPH ED. LAPHAM, No, 247

)

Labor Crisis—Product
Of Washington Double X

m

MAX A. BECK, No. 937

•

KBXFOtD R DiaCBY, No. 652

Q

tr

w

L. J. (BALDY) BOUINGEIl,No. G-300

PAUL HALL, Na

•

•

CHARLES C MARTIN. No. 1836

G~

•

V«l* be T»»

r~i

i&gt;Aiit AMBXOSe. No. #71)

SAVANNAH-AOENt
VoHbrOM

~';Voto for Two

t71

CHARUS B. MAtTIN, No. UN)

•

JOHN P. RYAN, No. C-79

•

JAMES P. SHARKEY, No. GA9

•

CHARLES WAID. No. C-54

•

THOMAS M.'WILHELM, Na 747}

ydh ht oso

O L (JACK) PARKER. Na O-J60

STTELHY WHITE. No. G-36

MOBn£~ AGENT
Vet* &lt;oe 0«»

a

OLDEN BANKS. No C-I

li«;'

•I'::

'.i i.-.,

(;
' i
J -T

t\
*

RESOLUTION

RESOLVED: Tbnl thla ba adoptad aa a wm-llma man.
sura with tha racommendaUon fliat II RS oa
tha ralarandum boUol at lha naxt qdaaMl
•lactlon.
^

MOBILE - JOWT PATROLMAN
Vol* lor Two

ARE YOU IN FAVOR OF ADOPtlNO
THE ABOVE RESOLUHON •

HtW OlftLEANS-AGENT

YES

Vcrto for DM '

•

NO

/

C. 3 (BUCK) STEPHENS. Nii G-76

M

l|

FOREWORD

WHEREAS: I&lt; BCBI b»Rn the policy of the Agenle Cool^
#ae«* In (ho pott to faring boR^ to (h« mgns
fairiiMp c#r(aln
and
WHEREAS: Theoa recommondotloiiB have provan to !&gt;•*
banafldol to tha mojoritrol tha maaabttifalp
' concarna&lt;iimd
VTHEREASi Al Ihl# Urn# b«arlnq In —Rial
r#coDmi#ndafloD# ar# In oKl#rioia&lt;liiliiaaal
•hlpplnq nil##, and
i
WHEREAS: Wa. Ih# ag#nla a###n)Uad Ii#f# In eonil*. !
•nco qo on r#cord to add io Ih# ehipplbq '
nil## for warHni# condUoht. Ih«#lat# b# It
RESOLVH): TBat aach n&gt;#p#cliT# port b# #mpow#t#d la 1
•#t a llm# Umil a# lo ifh#n a man ibdl
rapoit aboaid a •hip whan h# ban b##n dia.
paicbad. and b# II fiitlhat
RESOLVED: Thai whan th# Itana Ihnll laaal In Ih# nnUtm
porta, and a man who wai dlipalchad to a
ahip andwho lalli lo ahowup wlRdn Rial ••(
Rma. that anolhai man ha dlipalchad lo Ria
diip In hla ploca.and ba II fnrthm
RESOLVED: Thai 11 a man la dnmk or od,
lo aall Iho ahlp. that ha ba
finad tha aum ol twanty-fiaa doRoM
Thia lo ba notatad In lha ramark column In
hia mambenhip book by Ri# aqani In Rl*
port whaia Ihli has occutrad. and ba n
flni^y

TAMPA^AGENT

•

^

THE FOUOWINa RESOLUTION IS HOEEY SUB. &gt;
MITTED, THRU A MAJOSnT VOTE OF THE
BRANCHES, TO THE BSMBERSHIP.
IN ACCORDANCE WltH TIS WORDINO OF TRE
BESOLunoH, rr is NECESSARY FOR THE MooBii'
OT TO VOTE ON THE HESOLUnON THHIJ Wt
MEDIUM OF A KEFHtENDUM VOTE:
^

JOB VOLPIAN^ No. 0-36

HEW YOAK-DECK-FAlItOldilAlf

Veto fer.OBe

DANIEL Birrrs, No. 190

RESOLUTION BALLOT |

1

It-

EDWARD R. WALUCB, No, G-237

licaiFOiX -lOHit-PATROLMAN

•m

'm

Veto let OB# .

RAY W. SWEENEY, No. G-20

JAMES L TUCKER. No. 2209

"

The worst labor crisis of the war is riow at hand. Sen­
• JAMES P. SHEEHAN. No. G-306
sational headlines on the coal miners' »nd the railway work­
ers' wage disputes make that evident. But these large groups
of workers aren't the only ones affected. Unrest is preval­
NEW YORK - STEWABDS-PATBOLMAN
Veto i« Two
ent among workers all down the line.
• MAURICE BURNS71NB, No. 22371
If the Government is disturb-^
any and all disputes that may
ed about this situation, as it is
• JAOC COOPER CASE, No, 1140
arise. Labor unions agreed not
and should be, it has only itself
to strike for any cause but to
• CLAUDE FISHER, No. 362
to blame. We don't like to refer
submit their disputes to the
• WZOIAM HAMILTON, No. 3400
to the Government as "it," but if
Soard for decision.
• FRED HART, Na 488
we get more personal what we
A year passed — an eventful
say is bound to be interpreted
year during, which the machinery
politically and what we have to
of the Board was tested and
., .
. ...
say has no connection with poli­
found adequate. Then the im­
PHEADELPRtA AGENT
tics whatever. It is just a ques­
VotoftwOM
pact of inflation, with sharp rises
tion of dollars and cents and bow
in the cost of living, began to
• HARRY J, COLUNS. No
far they can be stretched. It's no
oppress the workers. Demands
longer a question of bread and
for wage adjustments flooded the
butter—it's just bread.
BALTfMORE-AGENT
Board. The workers were not
V*to torOw
'
The newspaper headlines don't trying to profit from the war.
• JOB PLANAGAM; N?- u:
tell the real story and the news­ They merely sought to restore R
paper editorials merely obscure just relatiofiship between wages
• JOHN KUPTA. Ho. 42? .
the facts. We intend to relate the and prices.
• C. M. (New Orlw'i POOPRS. No, 0--2
facts here—the events leading up
The Board, after considering
to what may he a tragedy.
the facts, established the "Little
The story begins immediately Steel" formula. It declared prices
after Pearl Harbor when organ­ had increased 15 per cent be­
ized labor gave the nation its no- tween Jan. 1, 1941 and May,
strike pledge. The President 1942. It agreed to increase wages for adjusting wages to make up
called a national conference of to a similar extent. When strict for increased living costs be­
public, labor and industry repre­ application of this formula would tween May and September, 1942,
sentatives to make that pledge not be sufficient to render jus­ and because labor had lost con­
official and to decide upon an tice, it provided several "outs" fidence in the desire or ability of
OPA to hold prices down. But
agency which could settle any for further adjustments.
again labor went along.
and all disputes peaceably with­
Labor did not relish this medi­
Last Spring it became evident
out interrupting production.
cine, this new-fangled idea of that the cost-of living was run­
VOLUNTARY AT FIRST
Government regulation of wages, ning out of bounds. At the same
As a result of this conference, hut it agreed to take it in order time Byrnes stripped the WLB of
the National War Lahdf Board to help prevent inflation and to power to make an;^ wage adjust­
was established. It was set Up further the war effort.
ments beyond the strict limita­
as a tri-partite body, with an
ERRORS OF COMPULSION
tions of the "Little Steel" formu­
equal number of public, labor
But the "Little Steel" formula la. When labor protested it was
and industry representatives. It did not stop inflation and in Oct­ promised that prices would be
was empowered by Executive ober, 1942 Congress passed the "rolled back." We are still wait­
Order to function as an indepen­ Economic Stabilization Act de­ ing for. that promise to be made
dent agency of the Government. signed to stabilize wages and good.
It was directed to judge each prices at the levels prevailing on
Finally, the coal miners' wage
case on the merits and its de­ Sept. 15, 1942. Former Supreme
dispute began to assume critical
cisions were to be final.
Court Justice Byrnes was named proportions. Word Was passed
Labor voltmtarily agreed tc) go EdOnOmic Stabilization Director.
confidentially" to AFL .repre­
along on this basis because it
The new set-up was another sentatives on the WLB that sac­
was democratic and because it bitter pill for labor to swallow
rifices should be made in wage
promised a just determination of because no provision was made cases involving AFL workers—

GALVESTON-AGENT

MARTIN TRAINOR, Na

T&amp;ANK WILUAMS, Na 6161

toms GOFPIN. Na 4326

M

BUt lUAH, PUERTO RICO - AODIT

H . ,

•

TEDD R. TERRINGTON, Na 0-63

NOHFOLt-AOENT
Vort for Oao

'

•

•
•'

JAMES T. McCAULLBY. No. 1

VM* let We

•
•
•

f"if

JAMES DiVITO, No. G-I83

MLTSUOHB - TOINT-PATROLHAN
Veto he Two
• '

NEW YORE - AGENT

MEW YORX-ENOINE PATMOLMAM
Veto lor Ten

&gt;267

•
•.

* MATHEW UmH, No. 2294

VetofwOM

•

NEW OHtEANS - }01Ht.t&gt;AtROI#MAN
Veto for Two

BALTIMORE-PATROLMAN-DISPATCHER
Vet* tet Oaa

BOSTON-AGBHT

PHONE

ADDRESS

ATUUfiic ft atnr tsanacT
M«.".HHnflvsscnot;oForncs!3
NOVEMBER -r'DECEMBER, IStS

'

•

Directory of Branches
BRANCH

•• ' •'

SMikr«r^ btenudMua Unimi of Nortli Anerica

IM not UM a l#ad pIBdl M BtoUag ih* banot BeSols morkdd «ftlb IMd PMKR
vMBaMbocounloft.

------- Secy-Treas*

•

1944 SAMPLE BALLOT

• 15' wiLOiANuPkBSS — UmoD AWr Ptfer ^

like the airframe and packing
house cases—in order to estab­
lish a backlog of precedents with
which to "stop the coal miners."
This the AFL refused indignant­
ly to consent to.

And how the truth is that the
WLB no longer operates as an
independent agency. Several of
its public members are directed
hov/ lo decide cases by Byrnes
and his successor Fred Vinson.
Since they hold the balance of

power on the Board, it can n(&gt;
longer be said that the WLB
judges e;.ch case on the merita
Such dictation is not consonant
with democracy. It is in direct
violation of the basic agreement
under which the W^B was set
up originally. Together with the
Government's failure to "hold'
the line" on prices, it is respon­
sible for the nation's present la­
bor crisis.
—Philip Pearl

ATLANTIC AND GVlF SBIPPING POR
WEEK OF qCT0BER.18th TO 22nd
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL
•SttlPPfiD
li£dtSt£R&amp;£&gt;

3S2

143

210

&gt;61

1 Wo

198

210

838

•!

.Jwvi'-Uw'.'1^1..-.r ,1-j-

�tat SEAFARFRS LOG

Friday, Noveihbeif 5, 1943

Pa^e Thfifd

• '11

Proposed S.LU. Constitutional Amendments
Here are the proposed Constitutional
changes just as they will appear on the ballot
;#hich will be handed to you when voting for
.1944 (5lficials. Ail of these changes were distussed and recommended by the Atlantic &amp;
Gulf District Agents' Conference held in New
ilfork, May 28, 1943.
After voting for officials, mark your Con­
stitutional ballot with an (X) in either of the
boxes at the bottom of the page. Make certain
to mark all ballot with either pen and ink or
indelible pencil. Ballots marked otherwise will
be void.
Page 9 — Article 3. Section 4 shall be amended to read
as follows:
Members more than Three, (3) months in arrears
in dues, assessments or unpaid fines, other than
during the period of strikes or lockouts shall for­
feit all claims to benefits and all other rights and
privileges in the Union. He shall not stand sus­
pended until six (6) -months in arrears in dues, as­
sessments or unpaid fines.
This section shall not excuse any members for
being behind in dues or assessments while em­
ployed.
Fage 11—Article f. Section 1 shall be amended to read
as follows:
Members more than one (1) year in arrears may
be reinstated through the concurrance of the
membership at a regular business meeting upon
payment of all dues, fines, and assessments for the
past twelve (12) months, from the date of such
re-instatement. Members so re-instated shall be
regarded as probationary members.
Page 13—Article 11. Section 1 shall be amended to read
as follows:
The officials at Headquarters shall consist of one
(1) Secretary-Treasurer and one (1) Assistant Sec­
retary-Treasurer who shall be stationed at Dis, trict Headquarters at New York, N. Y.
Page 16—Article 13. Section 2-B to be amended to read
as- follows:
That he be a full member of the Seafarers' In­
ternational Union of North America—Atlantic and
Gulf District for 2 years and in continuous good
standing fdt a period of one 1) year immediately
prior to the date of nomination.
There shall be added to Article 13 a hew section
known as Section 2-E which shall read as follows:
That he be an active and full book member and
show four months discharges for the current year
prior to date of nomination, this provision shall
not apply to officials and other office holders
working for the Union during current year.
Page 17—Article 13. Section 3-D shall be amended to
read as follows:
Be perforated at the upper edge and the per­
forated stubs numbered consecutively beginning
with No. 1. The Secretary-Treasurer shall cause
to be printed and shall forward to each BfancIT a
sufficient number of Ballots and numbered slotted
envelopes for the purpose of containing ballots
cast daiiy. A record shall be kept of the number
of the first and last ballot so forwarded. None but
official ballots shall be used in any General
Election.
Page 19 Article 13. Section 5 shall be amended to read
as folldws:
Members shall be entitled to vote upon present­
ing their membership certificates showing that
they are in good standing, and have not previouslyvoted at the same election. Members shall mark
their ballot with pen and ink, or indelible pencil
and shall signify their choice of candidates by
' marking a cross (X) in voting square opposite
names or by Writing in the blank line the name
of their choice if such name be not printed upon
the ballot. Lead pencils shall not be used m
marking ballots. When a member has marked his
ballot, he shall deliver it folded to the judge, who
after ascertaining that the member is entitled to
vote, shall tear off the numbered stub and deposit
the ballot. The committee shall then stamp the
niembefs' certificate of membership in the proper
column for the year and month of elecUon, such
stamp shall bear the word "voted the initials ot
the voting place and the date of the voting. If
the member is hqt entitled to vote, the ]udge shaU

void his ballot, the tellers shall count the ballots
as they are deposited and the clerks shall keep
record of the cpunt.
Page 19—Article 13. Section 6 shall be amended to
read as follows:
Balloting shall continue until every qualified
voter present has had an opportunity to vote. The
judge shall then count the num.berod stubs to
verify the count of the clerks and shall enclose
them in a sealed envelope in the Ballot Box. The
USED ballots shall then be placed' in an envelope
provided for the purpose and a slip of paper, also
specifically provided, shall be signed by each mem­
ber of the committee on election and pasted on
the back of the envelope. The sealed envelope
shall then be placed in the ballot box; The ballot
box shall then be locked and sealed, and the key
thereof shall be sealed up in an envelope, also
specifically provided for that purpose on the back
of which each member of the committee on elec=
tion shall again sign his name. The envelope so
signed and sealed shall be given in charge of the
Secretary-Treasurer or Agent or some other mem­
ber designated by the meeting; He shall then an­
nounce to the meeting and the Secretary-Treasur­
er, or Agent shall record in the minutes (a) The
number of ballots last distributed (b) The number
of ballots cancelled or destroyed and (c) The
number of ballots deposited. No candidate for
office shall be a member of the Committee on
Election.
Page 20-LArticle 13. Seciion 7 shall be amended io
read as follows:
• In the regular meeting held in Branches during
the second meeting in January, the Committee on
Election shall open the Ballot Box, count the num­
ber of ballots therein contained and count the
number of votes for each candidate. The result
shall be noted in the Minutes. The committee shaU
then forward to Headquarters all used ballots
(i.e.. All ballots taken from the Ballot Box, in­
cluding blank and disqualified ballots), together
with a copy of the tally sheets, under sealed cover,
marked "Ballots For Officers." In case no regular
meeting is held during such week, the Agent, in
the presence of the Committee on Election, or, in
their absence, before five other full members, shall
open the Ballot Box and count the ballots therein
contained (but shall not count and tally the votes)
and forward same to Headquarters in the manner
hereinbefore prescribed.
Page 22—Article 13. Section 11 shall have a new Sec­
tion added to read as follows:
The total ballots cast at any Branch or any one
day shall be voided upon proof of any irregularity.
ASSISTANT SECREfTARY-TREASURER
Page 26—-Article 15. Section 4 shall be amended to
read as follows:
The Assistant Secretary-Treasurer Shall carry
on his activities and duties under the direction of
the Secretary-Treasurer. His duties shall be to
represent, the Secretary-Tredsurer, to aid and as­
sist the Agents in the settlement of disputes, to
conduct negotiations and in the absence of the
Secretary-Treasurer to directly co-ordinate all or­
ganizational wof-k in the absence of the SecretaryTreasurer due to illness or other cause, the Assist­
ant Secretary-Treasurer shaU assume the duties
of Secretary-Treasurer until his return to active
duty.
»

EMERGENCY COMMITTEE
Page 31—Article 18. Seqjtion 3 shall be amended to
read as follows:
In case a difficulty of an urgent nature arises
which requires to be acted upon immediately or
before a meeting can be held, the Agent and the
officials in the port involved and such members as
may be available, shall constitute an emergency
committee, this committee shall have power to
take such actions as may be necessary, but such
actions may be reviewed or changed by a major­
ity vote of the membership at the regular branch
meeting.
The members of the En^jergency Committee must
have the same qualifications as provided for the
regularly elected officers. Provided, whenever a
quorum cannot be obtained for a regular meeting
at Headquarters. The Emergency Committee shall
have power to act upon such routine business as
may be transacted in such meetings.. The pro­
ceedings of such Emergency Committee shall be
made part of the minutes of the next regular
meeting.
Further provided, whenever there is an urgent
necessity for action by the Union, the Agent shall
give notice of such necessity at least forty-eight

hours before the regular meeting, in order that a
supreme quorum may be obtained. If supreme
quorum is unobtainable at such meeting, then
such officers and such members of the union as are
available, may sit as an Executive Board; to deal
solely with questions for which the committee
was organized. The rules of the supreme quorum
shall apply to such committee, and it shall exer­
cise all powers granted to a supreme quorum. The
proceedings of the committee, including the fact
that the effort to obtain supreme quorum had
failed, and any other records of the committee
transactions, shall be made part of the minutes of
the next regular meeting.
There shall be added to Article 18 a new section
to be known as:
NEGOTIATING COMMITTEE .
Page 32—Article 18. Section 4 shall read as follows:
The members elected to any Negotiating Com­
mittee shall have the same qualifications as the
duly elected officials.
Page 32—Article 18. Section 4-A shall read as follows:
The Negotiating Committee shall consist of the
Secretary-Treasurer and/or the Assistant Secre­
tary-Treasurer and/or any Agent that the Secre­
tary-Treasurer may require to assist him and
three (3) members. The three (3) members shall
be elected at the Port wherein negotiations are
to be conducted and if possible shall be one mem­
ber from each department.
Page 34—Article 19. Section 5 shall be amended to
read as follows:
Whenever a member is found guilty and sen­
tenced the action is final upon ratification through
the next regular business meetings.
Page 37—Article 21. Section 4 shall be amended to'
read as follows:
|
The original, duplicate and triplicate of each
receipt shall bear the name of the Union. The of­
ficial title of the Officer by whom they are used
and shall specify the form of income receipted
for. Receipts for initiation fee, dues and assess­
ments shall bear thereon their respective face
values and such face values must in no case be
erased or altered, the original receipt for initia­
tion fee, properly filled out shall consitute the
certificate of probationary membership.
Page 43—Article 24. Section 8-B shall be amended fe
read as follows:
If a full member in good standing is buried by
relatives without such relatives duly notifying the
Union of such member's death before interment*
no benefit shall be paid by the Union. The funeral
benefit in any case shall not be more than or ex­
ceed One hundred Dollars ($100.00).
Page 44—'Article 25. Seciion 1 shall be amended lo
read as follows:
Full members who enter a Hospital in good
standing, shall be entitled to Hospital supplies or
the equivalent thereof in cash not to exceed two
doUars per week ($2.00) for a period of no more
than fifty-two (52) consecutive weeks, provided
(1) he is a patient in a United States Marine Hos­
pital or (2) while a patient in any other institu­
tion for the cure of the sick except when confined
for mental alienation, provided such institutions*
are located at headquarters, or in any branch of
the Union, or in the immediate vicinity thereof.
Page 44—Article 25. Seciion 1-B shall have a new
Section added to read as follows:
Probationary members who enter Hospitals iri
good standing shall be entitled to Hospital sup­
plies or the equivalent thereof in cash not to ex­
ceed two (2) dollars per week. However, he shall
not receive in benefits (1) more monies than he
has paid into the Union, provided he is a patient
in a United States Marine Hospital or (2) while a
patient in any other institution for the cure of the
sick except when confined for mental alienation:
and provided such institutions are located at
headquarters, in any Branch of the Union or in
the immediate vicinity thereof.
Page 47—Article 27. Seciion I shall be amended io
read as follows:
Regular weekly meetings shall be held in each
Branch at 7 o'clock each Monday evening except
whenever Monday happens to fall on a holiday,
the meeting shall be held at the same hour of the
next day. All Branch Agents shall keep their
respective Branches open on every regular meet­
ing night from 7 o'clock p.m. to 7:30 o'clock p.m.
for the purpose of obtaining a quorum.

ARE YOU IN FAVOR OF ADOPTING THE ABOVE PRINTED AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION, WHICH WERE
HRAWN UP AND RECOMMENDED BY THE &amp;ECENT ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT AGENTS CONFERENCE.

YES

•^1
yoting Period on These Amendments Shall Be the Same As Provided for the Election of Officers for 1944

I

isE*'

�r

Page Four

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Fridair, November 5. 1943

Around The Ports CHISEL OF TORPEDO
VICTIMS IS UPHELD
BALTIMORE

1^'
C'

: '*.' •

dependence, and self discipline
keeps the morale of union men
the Nielsen alibi, yes the men their pool and boycott the union
high
and this is a prime factor
Our curiosity was aroused re­
{Continued from Page 1)
in
saving
ships
and
keeping
loss
were
offered their repatriation halls. The standby scale is as
cently by an item in the RMO
wage,
but the bonus offer was follows;
lion
wage
was
tendered
but
of
life
down
to
a
minimum.
Our
montiily report showing that 265
only
up
until the time they left
men
appreciate
and
accept
the
such
tender
was
refused
by
the
men were dispatched to Vessels
OS, Messmen and Wipers
the
torpedoed
ship and not up
responsibility
of
.
being
a
vital
men. Due to the fact that
in the Port of Norfolk. Checking
$ 6.00 per day.
until the crew arrived in the first
this report further we found 5 and indispensable part of our war
these
repatriaiees
w6re
repa=^
Bosun,
^
U.S. port, which they are en­
chief stewards and a large num­ machine. They have been trust­
AB,
FOW
6.50
per
day
triated in 8 different groups, titled to receive. This is a matter
ber of unrated men—messmen, ed with getting the troops and
Stewards,
the
computation of repatriation of several hundred dollars, which
the
implements
of
war.
over
to
wipers, O.S.—were included in
Electrician
8.00 per daf
bonus has necessarily been a perhaps is a drop in a bucket to
the item. At the same time and the-combat areas. They are do­
Mates
and
Engineers
for the same period as the report ing that job and doing it well highly complicated matter re­ Nielsen or any MWEB member,
9.00 per day
quiring checking with operat­ however, to seamen it is a lot of
our shipping list listed 200 men and they are determined to carry
Skipper
and
Chief
blood-money.
of all ratings plus men not reg­ out their mission despite the op­ ors of the various repatriation
Engineer
10.00 per day
vessels. We understand that
istered. During that period, position of shipowners and bu­
But regardless of how much
this check is being completed
The RMO is spending thous­
when we got orders from the reaucrats. As a question of ef­
money is involved, the seamen
as
rapidly
as
possible
in
order
ficiency
and
cost
we
have
only
ands
upon thousands of dollars
companies to send men to Nor­
feel that they shpuld at least be
folk the or-iers were always for to consider the saving in trans­ that repatriation bonus may be paid in full before being asked to in order to draw the seamen
paid shortly. We are further
away from the unions. Most of
A.B.'s, Oilers, Water-tenders, and portation expenses when the
companies
secure
replacements
advised
that settlement in full ship out and subject themselves those who register in the pool
Cooks but with the other ratings
to another torpedoeing.
are the green trainees fresh out
always omitted. Further check from the nearest union hall in­ is not contingent on the return
stead
of
the
unecessary
long
dis­
of
the
Master,
but
will
be
made
showed that the RMO at Norfolk
Nielsen apparently believes of the schools. These men, who
as
aforesaid
as
quickly
as
the
tance
transportation
that
has
have never gone to sea, get $6
relayed their order for the ma-"
been the practice lately. Our men
payroll can be made up. While that once the men demand per day standby while experi­
jority of those assignments to the
the full observance of their
we regret that delays of this
RMO in New York while the buy war bonds and help aU they
rights, they are entitled to no enced seamen who have been
character
are
sometimes
neces­
can
when
they
are
.
ashore;
torpedoed in delivering supplies
RMO and the companies were
more consideration.
afloat or ashore they are doing sary due to the complicated na­
to the war front, are denied
fully aware that the men could
ture of making up the payroll, As for the delays due to wages and subsistence even to
be obtained from either Balti­ their best and better than their
best and it is the union's business we do not believe that any "highly complicated" bookkeep­ the date of the pay off.
more or Philadelphia at consid­
to see that no one hinders them. change in the present Decision ing, it is outrageous to expect
erable less cost. It is evident
The WSA-RMO criteria for
is called for with regard to torpedoed men to be the victim
that the companies and the RMO
JOSEPH FLANAGAN. Agent
payment of repatriation bene­ of shipowner inefficiency. We maintaining men on the beach
are conniving with each othei" to
fits after arrival in the United don't care how long it takes the seems to be whether or not he is
avoid getting replacements from
SAVANNAH
States. This seems to be parti­ shipowners (working on a cost a union man. If he is a union
the Union and do so only when
cularly true in this case where plus basis) to get their records in man—regardless of his contribu­
they are stuck for rated men.
Talking about dictators in Eu­
tender was made of the repa­ order, but we demand that the tion to the war effort—to hell
triation wage notwithstanding torpedoed men not ^)e forced to with him!
Recently we received an order rope, we have had quite a bit of
It
is
this
attitude
on
the
part
experience
in
the
la.st
few
weeks
the delay in payment of repa­ beg on the street, during this pro­
from our Norfolk hall for almost
of the government agencies
triation bonus."
cess.
two entire crews and began to with dictators in Washington, in
which the stream-lined do-good­
regards
to
writing
addendums
to
watch out for complications. We
Let's break down some of Mr. This treatment of the torpe­ ers at the United Seamen's !^r-,
our
contract
with
the
South
At­
were right in expecting compli­
Nielsen's Washington language doed men is not a question of vice have refused to believe
cations because about an hour af­ lantic Steamship Line.
and see just what he is saying. bureaucratic bungling, rather it existed. When the SIU con­
ter receiving the order from Due to the fact that this com­
To begin with, he admits that 14
Norfolk the local Calmar agent pany was alloted a Diesel-elec­ men arriving in this port over a is a conscious union-busting pol­ fronted the USS in New Orleans
icy. For proof of this, contrast recently with the fact that tor­
phoned in the same order but tric ship, this required a change
month
ago,
have
not
yet
been
how non-union and union men pedoed men were getting kicked
witho'ut calling for the messmen, in the classification in the man­
paid
^off.
Part
of
his
excuse
is
are
treated by the War Shipping around • by the WSA, there was
O.S. and wipers. To make quite ning of these vessels, whereby
that
the
bookkeeping
involved
is
Administration.
The RMO has a general disbelief. Well, here are,
sure, we checked with Norfolk our coptract with this company
"highly
complicated."
His
second
fink
hiring
hall
which has be^n the facts right on the barrel
and upon being told the original would take care of this matter
excuse
is
that
"payment
of
re­
set
up
in
competition
with^the head. And no amount of charity
order was OK we advised Nor­ and also make provisions for a
patriation
wage
was
tendered
union
halls.
In
an
effort
to keep is going to satisfy these men who
folk not to accept any men from night cook and baker on ships
but
such
tender
was
refused
by
the
seamen
away
from
the have risked their very lives, only
the RMO for the two ships as we that they are operating that have
the
men."
unions,
the
RMO
pays
a
standby
to be treated as a bunch of
were willing and able to supply a manning scale of over 64.
In regard to the second part of wage to all those who will enter stumble bun^s.
both crews as originally ordered.
After negotiating with the
The Calmar line refused to
company
for about two weeks,
Agents. The purpose of these SUP, MCS, NMU, SIU, MFOW,
change its order when contacted
we
finally
agreed
to
certain
ad­
cards
is to obtain the Veterans' and others. We realize that the
and a deadlock'developed. How­
dendums
and
wage
scale.
Before
Status
for Merchant Seamen. Status of VETERANS is essential
ever, the issue was relayed' to
the
ink
got
dry
on
this
adden­
These
cards
to be mailed to the to all Merchant Seamen.
Secretary-Treasurer John Hawk
Somewhere in England
dum,
the
WSA
threw
it
out
of
President
of
the U.S.A.
Let's take the initiative and
and he quickly convinced the
October
7,
1943
the'window
on
account
&lt;of
the
company that the union was
Below is a sample of the card start the "Ball Rolling."
S.S. (
)
wages being too high. We went
in mention:
right.
American-Hawaiian S.S. Co.
LOUIS NEIN,
back to the company to renego­
However, the other company, tiate addendums and evidently
Date
(Editors note: the SIU Execu­
Mississippi, was still to be delt the WSA had told the company Editor:
Franklin D. Roosevelt
tive
Board is on record to peti­
with. The Norfolk Agent of this they could not go above wages
The President of the U.S.
This
entire
Black
Gang
goes
tion
Congress to grant seamen
company would not OK trans­ that were established in the in­
I being a bonafide Seaman
on
record
to
place
the
following
the
status
of veterans.)
portation. Meanwhile the RMO dustry, although there were no
and a member of the SIU serv­
resolution
before
the
member­
was dispatching men to our Nor­ wages established for oilers on
ing our Country, the U.S.A.,
folk hall for assignment to this Diesel jobs. They insisted that ship to be concurred on.
sailing merchant ships to all
Be
it
resolved
that
the
Union
Mississippi ship, and our Nor­ they were going to pay wages
war zones. Kindly ask you to
folk hall was promptly sending that were established on recp- make up individual pledge cards aid us in obtaining recognition
to be signed by members and
Crew of S. S. Daniel Hugar
them back to the RMO.
rocating engines and turbine permit men. These cards to be for all U.S. Merchant Seamen
which
paid off Cel. 13. 1943. has
with a status as "VETERANS
However, Brother John Hawk jobs. The company called up sev­ put out bjt Patrolmen and
linen
money coming. Collect
OF WAR."
was finally successful in obtain­ eral shipping companies that
Mississippi
Line. New York.
Name
ing transportation but the issue now operate Diesel-electric ships scale above $187.50 for chief
Crew
member
Chamberlain has
Rating
is not entirely settled. Further and these companies all main­ electricians and $137.50 for sec­
his
Log
lifted
and can collect
tained
that
the
oiler
must
take
action is pending on this matter
ond electricians. The WSA in
Also this Resolution be sent to from New York office when he
care
of
the
donkey
boiler
with­
as some companies are trying
dictating to the companies are all Maritime Unions such as gels his linen money.
to avoid the responsibility • of out the payment of overlime or violating the Statements of Prin­
paying transportation for men to increas'e in wages. We maintain ciples and Policies given to them
outporls and as we said before that the oiler on Diesel jobs have by this organization. This should
KEEP CLEAR WITH YOUR DRAFT BOARD
they are working in conjunction additional duties and that he be brought to their attention im­
with the WSA on this issue - so should receive ten dollars extra mediately, whereby this unfair
By observing the following simple instructions you will
that the RMO can get rid of its pay per month for this work. To practice ceases and gives the
continue to receive deferment from military service. Fail
White Elephant of too many men. consummate this addendum the unions and operators an oppor­
to observe these rules and you may wind up in the army.
Aside from the union's agree­ company finally agreed to give tunity to negotiate addendums
WHEN SIGNING ON: Give the clerk or skipper all the
ments with the companies there this oiler ten dollars extra with to their contracts, because there
informatiorL
necessary to fill out RMO Card No. 47 (Green
are other major reasons why the the understanding that we take is no steamship company who
Card).
companies should live up to their it up with the powers in Wash­ will pay more than they actually
WHEN SIGNING OFF:,See that Card No. 48-A is ptopobligations and get their men ington and if necessary take it to have, to and they don't have to
perly
filled out by skipper or clerk.
from the union. Experienced and the Labor Board.
be guided by the WSA.
efficient crews are invaluable for
Also the question of electri­
Prospects for the next week or
Ship out before your allotted time ashore has expired.
the normal operation of the ves­ cians is involved, in as much as so for shipping look good.
If you have not yet filled out the Green Card, contact your
sel and especially in time of the WSA refuses the company
draft board and let them know that you are sailing.
CHARLES WAID, Agent
danger or attack. Experience, in­ the power to negotiate a wage

Editors Mail

MONEY DUE

^KC-

. ,

'v-v;

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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
CHISEL OF TORPEDO VICTIMS OK BY NIELSEN&#13;
SIU LICKS SHIPOWNERS' MOVE TO SHORT CIRCUIT UNION'S SHIPPING HALLS&#13;
FDR AGAIN SEIZES MINES&#13;
CHRISTMAS PACKAGES FOR SIU PRISONERS OF WAR&#13;
LABOR CRISIS - PRODUCT OF WASHINGTON DOUBLE X&#13;
PROPOSED SIU CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS&#13;
AROUND THE PORTS&#13;
KEEP CLEAR WITH YOUR DRAFT BOARD</text>
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                    <text>JOQ
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
Vol. V.

NEW YORK. N. Y.. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 1943

No. 32

Curran Would Keep Old
Timers Off The Ships
BRAGS HE HAS " PROMOTED MEDICAL EXAMS"
The specter which has long haunted old-time seamen, that of being blackHsted out
of the industry by means of stringent and rigged physical examinations, moved a step
closer to reality this month as the Stalinist clique in the leadership of the NMU came
out in support of standardized and periodic government physical examinations for all
seamen. In Curran's own words, the men would be subjected to "an examination for
for your blood, an examination
for your lungs and an examina­
tion for your heart."
Many such moves have been
attempted in the past by various
shipowner groups, but this is the
first time that so-called labor
The "Little Steel Formula," an
leaders have dared to openly
employer created yardstick
support such an obviously anti­
which kept labor's wage frozen
union measure. But there is
while employers' profits (and the
good reason for this.
cost of living) skyrocketed, is
C. P. DISSENTION
about to be smashed under re­
peated blows from the trade
It is well known along the
unions. This formula limited
waterfront that the C.P. fraction
wage increases to 15% over those Organized labor's contention in the NMU is torn by dissention.
prevailing January 1941. Profit­ that the Office of Price Adminis­ Many old time members of the
eering and the cost of living was tration has failed to check profit­ party, and many rank and file
not limited, and the workers eering was confirmed up to the militant seamen who were not
were faced with 124% increase hilt this week by a report of the members but followed the Stal­
in the price of most of the neces­ Bureau of Labor Statistics of the inist line in the belief that it
Department of Labor.
sities of life.
constituted good trade unionsim,
To the United Mine Workers Instead of prices having been have become fed up with the
must go the major portion of the rolled back, as the OPA .has sell-out artists in the leadership
credit for smashing the "Little claimed, they continue to ad­ of the union. These old timers
Steel Formula." Over the past vance, the report said. From are now conducting a struggle
year they have fought, by both August 15 to September 15, it- against Curran and Company,
negotiation and strike, to win a was disclosed, the cost of living and this move to • force medical
living wage for the men that dig shot up four-tenths of 1 per cent. examinations could well be a
coal. Despite the smear campaign This is the average for the en­ maneuver to drive out of the in­
NEW YORK—A jury of distinguished artists gave launched against them by the tire country, and covers only dustry this opposition. The 13th
high praise this week to the entry of Douglas M. Keifer of employers and some labor lead­ prices based on OPA ceilings, the Street machine no doubt feels
Seattle, Washington, a member of the Sailors Union of the ers, the Miners continued the report revealed, emphasizing more capable of handling the

Labor Heat Thawing
Bosses' Wage Freeze

Price Rollback A
Dud; Living Cost
Trend Is Upward

SUP Man's Portrait
Of Furuseth Wins
Artists' Praise
t

Pacific, in the second annual merchant seamen's art exhi­
bition which is to tour the United States under the auspices
of the United Seamen's Service.^
The evening sky is an impres­
The picture he submitted IS a
sionistic rendition of the Ameri­
portrait of Andrew Furuseth,
can flag, with ryght stars show­
founder of the SUP.
ing against a deep blue back­
More than 150 paintings were ground in the upper left-hand
submitted by seamen artists for corner and the field
streaked
judging and seventy were chosen with the red and white reflection
by the jury. The exhibition will of the early morning sun. The
open at the Corcoran Gallery of figure subject is shown in half
Art in Washington on November profile, and is an excellent like­
28. After a month in Washing­ ness of the militant maritime la­
ton, the exhibition will tour the bor leader. The portrait is not
principal cities of the country for sale and belongs to the
and a selection of works from Seattle Branch of the SUP.
the show will go to London,
The mernbers of the jury
Able Seaman Kiefer who lives which selected the pictures for
at 16281/2 43rd Avenue North, in the exhibit are John Taylor
Seattle, has been working in oils Arms, internationally renowned
for less than a year and has had etcher; Roland Clark, etcher- and
no formal training in the graphic art writer; Jo Davidson, sculp­
arts. While many seamen with tor; Gordon Grant, marine artist;
similar technical backgrounds Raphael Soyer, prize - winning
submitted work for the exhibi­ painter; Leon Kroll, celebrated
tion, which in its final form is painter; and C. Powell Minnigecomposed of works of really rode, director of the Corcoran
high calibre, the portrait by Gallery of Art.
Brother Keifer was considered
Announcement of the "prize
outstanding in its class.
awards will be made very soon.
The first
annual exhibit by
Boldly executed with broad
United
Seamen's
Service of mer­
slashing strokes, a strong imag­
chant
seamen's
art
was held at
inative touch was displayed in
the picture by Keifer in his the Hall of Art, New York, Feb­
handling of a mountain and sky ruary 1-15, 1943. The first prize
background fringed at the bot­ winner of that shbw was Ben
tom by a busy waterfront scene. Rosen, member of the SIU.

•

(^Continued on Page 4)

• {Continued on Page 4)

{Continued on Page 3)

TWO LESS FOR US TO WORRY ABOUT

Surfaced for a rendezvous somewhere at sea. two Nazi U-boats are shown in this spectacular
photo as they were surprised by depth bombs from a Navy torpedo plane. Attacking both subs
singlehanded, the pilot planted the depth charges shown exploding near the craft at the right.

MM

�iisaCTir^^'-T'-

Page Two

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. November 12, 1943
aa ^

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
x\tlaiitic and Gulf District

,^^rR€PORT orv.«
=5i^ASHII\GTOIV

«BV MATWEW OUSHAME-» » '

Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor

All agents are advised to keep "Baldy" L. J. Bollinger, SIU check. The old gal loaned the
close tabs on the RMO's field of­ Patrolman, New York — S.S. boy her pen, and it seems ha
HARRY LUNDEBERG ------ Vresideiit
Thomas B, Reed, Board has ruled failed to return it to her prompt­
ficers and see that they do not that there was an enemy attack
110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.
ly. Being a little gassed up—he
try and push stumble bums from on July 26, 27th, 1943. Bonus is wandered down the street to si
JOHN HAWK
------- Secy-Treas.
their pools on ships in preference payable.
gin mill and left the pen on the
P. O. Box 25, Station P., New York City
to regular Union men. If the
No disposition has been taken bar.
on
other cases before the Board,
Now this outfit is spending all
union's haven't enough replace­
MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - "Washington Rep.
waiting
for more information kinds of money to impress the
ments
in
their
halls,
arrange­
424 5 th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
from the operators, • government public on the service that it ren­
ments should be made with the agencies.
•
•
ders to seamen. The service that
operators to ship men in from
this particular gal rendered toi
Directory of Branches
UNITED
other ports, this
in line with
the boy who borrowed her foun­
SEAMEN'S SERVICE
tain pen was to have the police
the WSA's contracts with the op­
PHONE
ADDRESS
BRANCH
This
outfit is a creation of the yank the boy out of bed around
erators, or their agents. Don't let
NEW YORK (4)
2 Stone St
BOwlini? Green 9-3437
any HMO Field Officer tell you War Shipping Administration, 9 A.M. and insisted that he be
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Gay St
Calvert 4539
that the union cannot ship Union the guiding hand from the WSA arrested for stealing her pen. It
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St
Lombard 7651
was only after the cops retraced
men from one port to another. is Mr. Marshall Dimock.
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS (16) ..309 Chartres St
Canal 3336
Check on the union's contracts. The USS pamphlets state that his steps and found the pen at
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St
Savannah 3-1728
TAMPA
423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
The union has the authority un­ this organization is a non profit the bar that the woman was purMOBILE
55 So. Conception St
Dial 2-1392
der their contracts to ship men outfit, and its purpose is to ren­ suaded not to have him thr'own
PUERTO RICO..
45 Ponce de Leon
Puerto de Tierra
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-8043
from
one port to another provid­ der welfare service to merchant in jail.
FT. LAUDERD,\LE. .... .2021 S. Federal Highway. .. Ft. LauJeidale 1601
ed
this
procedure does not delay seamen. Since the inception of
The gal in question here hap­
v;
•
the sailing of any vessel. Em­ this outfit the seamen who know pens to be none other than Mr.
PUBLICATION OFFICE:
the score on welfare organization, Marshall E. Dimocks mother-inployers must foot the bill.
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
have always felt that this was law, Gladys Ogden. It certainly
MARITIME
another racket, to saddle seamen turns out to be a non profit or­
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8346
WAR EMERGENCY BOARD
with a group of parasites. Of ganization as far as seamen are
267
In order to assist the Secretary late there have been several concerned, but it now seems that
Treasurers of the District Unions stories coming" to light about the it is turrdng out to be a profit­
to compile a complete chart on functions of the USS.
able organization as far as Mr.
the Board's decisions, I'U submit The latest one is in reference Dimock is concerned. Wonder]
a monthly report on the Board's to a seamen who sauntered into how many more relatives Mr.
disposition of all cases submitted. the Wilshire (USS) Hotel in New Dimock has?
S.S. Robert Newell, Oct. 28— York, and the boy had a few un­
Another yokel connected witK
Board stated that according to der his belt. Being in a liberal this outfit is a Mr. James Stuart
NEW YORK, (ITF)—The Greek Maritime "Welfare information received from the trend of mind he decided to Moore. He is the USS Port Exe­
Committee, in cooperation with the Greek Maritime Union, operators, vessel was not in Al­ spend a few dollars. Digging in­ cutive in New York. From all
giers on August 27th, and not to his. jeans he found that he available information to date (hij?
has actively interested itself in the status of a score of Greek entitled to attack bonus.
had no change. Upon spying one autocrat was formerly connectedi
Merchant Seamen who are at present detained in Ellis Isl­ L. Goffin, SIU Patrolman, New of the female employees, he po- with a boys' home, and from re­
and. A majority of the men have indicated willingness to York—S.S. William Patterson— itely requested the use of her ports the boys will never forget
Board notified company that fountain pen so that he could till their maker claims them, of
ship out aboard Greek and other#
Commenting
on
the
plight
of
crew is entitled to Port attack affix his signature to a travelers
Allied merchant vessels while
{Continued on Page 4)
the
Greek
merchant
seamen
in
bonus.
others want to join the Greek
Navy, it was said at the Commit­ "American ports, Mr. Stephano R. W. Sweeney, SIU Patrol­
CREW OF S.S. LAWTON B. EVANS
tee's offices, 18 East 41st Street, pointed out that the detention of man, New York—S.S. Mar^mar,
the
men
was
harmful
to
the
Board
ruled
that
there
was
an
New York City.
"CREDIT TO MERCHANT MARINE"
The plight of the Greek sea­ morale of the Greek seafarers attack September 15th, 1943.
who
are
anxious
to
serve
the
Al­
Bonus payable. S.S. West Kyska,
farers was brought to the atten­
Captain Frank A. Burdock, skipper of the S.S. Lawton
tion of the Committee in a letter lied cause. Many of these men Board ruled that there was no
B. Evans was so impressed with the efficiency and courage
signed jointly by the detained have been the victims of pre­ attack from July 15 to July 27th,
of his SIU crew that he drafted a letter of commendation for
men and demanding redress of vious ship sinkings and all have 1943. No bonus payable. S.S.
done
their
best,
he
added.
An­
all
members of the deck department.
Thomas Nelson, Board has ruled
their grievances. The signers
other
factor
in
the
tangled
situa­
that there was an enemy attack
complained that they had ah'cady
This letter shows that in spite of the propaganda of the
spent several months in federal tion is the contradictory interpre­ on September 6th, 1943. Bonus
shipowners and the WSA, it is the union seaman who forms
custody and that they were at a tation of the Greek service draft payable.
the backbone of the merchant marine. The letter follows:
loss to understand their contin­ law with regard to Greek seafar­ C." Fisher, SIU Patrolman, New
"To Whom It May Concern:
ing nationals in foreign ports.
ued detention.
York—S.S. Felix Grundy, Board
Mr. Christopher S. Stephano, Union spokesmen observed that has ruled that there was no en­
"Francis M. Whelan, Bosun
chairman of the Greek Maritime qualified seamen with more than emy attack on July 31, 1943. No
Andrew G. Burbul, A.B.
Welfare Committee, appealed to two months of maritime service bonus payable.
Joseph T. Briant, A.B.
, ;
,
the U. S. immigration authorities during the Greek-Italian war
Robert A. Stack, A.B.
; '] i
A. C. Dynarski, SIU Patrol­
and the War Shipping Adminis­ were exempt from the draft. The man, New York—S S. George N.
Matthew J. Monahan, A.B.
•" V
tration and secured permission Greek authorities in the United Pendleton. No disposition made
Peter M. Kelly, A.B.
to visit the men and investigate States, however, are of the opin­ on case. S.S. Grace Abbot, Board
Robert J. Munson, A.B.
their complaints. A delegation ion that the exempt provisions has, ruled that there was no
Tadeusz Jan Morski, A.B.
composed of Mr. Stephano, Pe- do not apply to the Western enemy attack on September 15th,
Anthony Savaikus, O.S.
tros Spiridakos, secretary of the Hemisphere and insist upon 1943. No bonus payable.
Stincy J. Vaitkelunas, O.S.
Greek Maritime Union and a rep­ drafting eligible merchant sea­
» "The above named men were members of the crew of
resentative of the immigration men for naval service. This at­ Jack Dwyer, SUP Patrolman,
this ship during Voyage No. 2. Sailing from' (
) on
department went on November titude, in the opinion" of union New York—S.S. Hawaiian, Board
(
) and arriving hack-in (
) on (
)—5
4th to Ellis Island and met with officials, has had tlie effect of has ruled that there was an en­
the men. Hope was expressed af­ further demoralizing the men emy attack on September 15,
months and 12 days. During this time the ship was in the
ter the meeting that the difficul­ who had recently been assured 1943. Bonus is payable. S.S. Lot
(
) Sea on shuttle-run. Also this ship was in the first
ties would be straightened out by union headquarters in Cairo, Whitcomb, no disposition made
group of seven Liberty Ship's to take part in the invasion
of (
)..
and the men soon be released seat of the Greek goyernment-in- on case.
and given employment aboard exile, that they were draft J. H. Volpin, SIU Patrolman,
"During the voyage there was encountered 3 submarine
New York—S.S. Benjamin Wil­
ship.
e-xempt.
attacks and 7 airplane attacks.
liams, Board has ruled that
"These men have proved themselves one hundred per­
there was an enemy attack on
cent
capable and efficient in every respect. Their conduct
April 25th, 1943. Bonus is pay­
ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
has
been
excellent and there has not been a complaint made
able. S.S. Kofresi, Board has
about
them
during the entire voyage; or has there been any
ruled that there -was an enemy
WEEK OF OCTOBER 2Sth TO mh ,
one
at
any
time absent from duty. This is an unusually
attack on August 16-17. Bonus is
splendid
record
and it's a pleasure indeed to recommend
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL payable.
either of the men as being A-1, in every respect. Such men
J. F. Sheehan, SIU Patrolman,
are a credit to the Merchant Marine Service."
SHIPPED
361
152
278
791
New York—S.S. Flomar, Board
FRANK A. MURDOCK, Master
has ruled that there was an en­
REGISTERED
250
200
211
661
S.S.
Lawton B. Evans"
emy attack on September 15th,
1943. Bonus is payable.

Committee Seeks Freedom
Of Detained Greek Seamen

W

Sm­

•' •

•

' i

"

. "''''"'I- -

�r&gt;
Friday, November 12, 1943

THE

SEAFARERS

WHArS DOING
-rr

Around the PoKs
GALVESTON

LOG

Page Three

N.Y. Board Of Education
Reveals Plan For Setting
Up Maritime High School

Mates &amp; Pilots, resigned the past
week to go to sea. He was on
leave and has just returned from
sea. Good luck Capt. and may
your successor give us the back­
ing that you did. The crew of
the Wm. Clayborn donated $57.
to the LOG.
E. R. WALLACE, Agent

heroes of the ermed guard ser­ The New York Board of Edu the torepeak, lifeboats, davits,
vice. Also read with great inter­ cation has completed plans for fire lines and all other geaij
est the accoimt of the crew off the creation of a maritime higi usually found on deck.
' One of the busiest weeks since
the
vessel that was beached dur­ school, the first of its kind in the
the SIU has been in the state of
There will also be a wheeling
the blow off the eastern country. Under the new set up
Texas. Two pay off ships in
house
for use in instructing stu­
coast and how the Coast Guaid youth graduating from primary
. Houston, and had to take a full
dents
on
employment of the fath­
rescued the Crew of the armed schools would be eligible for mari
crew to Beaumont. Shipped
ometer,
manual
steering controls,
guard with breech buoys and time training, just as now they
. everything that looked like a
compasses,
metal
mike and fire
small boats. The merchant mar­ can receive vocational training
seaman and sent a couple of
detection
systems.
The. hatches
ine crew slide down the side and for shoreside industries.
stumble bums back to the RMO.
and
booms
will
be
used for ac­
walked ashore. Again on the The school, accommodating 3,
Getting men in these parts is
NEW ORLEANS
tual
demonstrations
of loading
Luckenbach the six man armed 000 students, will be constructec
getting serious.
cargo.
The
bridge
will
be con­
To Mr. Dimock of the RMO: There has been quite a rest for guard was taken off in breech after the war if the project goes nected with all departments of
You stated while in conference you and the other long suffering buoys with an audience of sever­ through on the East River water the ship, where navigation will
at New Orleans that you had re­ brothers from the time that I al thousand people. The ship's front near the Battery. The Edu be studied and from which or­
cruited and trained so many last used space in the LOG to crew stayed aboard the vessel. cation Board has requested the ders will be issued to the "en­
Business here is picking up to City Planning Commission to ask
thousand men and that there was expound pearls of wisdom (just
where,
with helping the Texas amendment of the capital outlay gine" departrnent under all types
a
matter
of
opinion).
thousands more to get and train
of simulated conditions.
- between the first of - tHe year. Went walking in our fair city ports, our own shipping is not too budget to provide funds for the
You even asked us to try to get the other night with the Skipper bad. On deck it's very good, in school, the first high school of its The site proposed for the threestory structure is city-owned
our members out of the ship- off one of Higgins' puddle jump­ the other departments it has kind in the world.
slowed
up
some.
Practical training for a career property on South Street, be­
, yards, who are working there, ers (neat rigged little scows) and
Don't
forget
that
the
voting
is
at sea will be provided, accord­ tween Whitehall and Broad
» and sail the ships. The NMU the man stated that he had to
Streets, and was formerly a city
now going on and now is yqpr ing to present plans, with
get
a
high
pressure
as
the
ti-ansdelegation at the conference went
chance to get in and find out freighter, a yawl, a ketch and a ferry terminal. It is located in
port
services
seemed
to
expect
. so far as to ask you and Pen­
what that so and so is doing here, heavy-duty power boat anchored the heart of the Port of New
nington to see if you could not it. Well, after trying practically
there, and in the other port. At in the basin in the rear of the York's shipping district. The
aU
the
shops
on
Canal
St.,
still
get Congress to pass a law to
building will be laid out to cor­
least this coming year I'll be able
take away the papers of a sea­ no hats. The oilers and messboys to join the throng that sets back school. Within the building itself respond with the relative posi­
in
the
ATS
had
them
all
bought
will
be
a
freighter
topside,
about
man working ashore, and to see
tion of each department on a
and says I could do better then
that a seaman could not get a up. The skipper said, "That's that, and then sit on my fanny 200 feet long, forty feet wide and ship. The engine department will
, defense job. lAr. Dimock, right O.K. as long as I tried." Since and do nothing. Are you one of forty feet high, so that students be located on the first floor, the
may get the feel of a real deck.
in this part of the country I can that time I hear that the ATS this type?
has
issued
orders
that
all
civilian
The
"ship" would have three deck and radio departments on
obtain men that want to go to
So till the roses bloom in hatches with accompanying the upper floors, and the roof
employees
wear
civvys
ashore.
sea, but can't under your phoney
Times Square,
masts, booms, king-posts, a chart- will' correspond to the bridge
set up which eliminates a man Tush, tush.
Steady as she goes.
Considerable
write-ups
in
the
room, flying bridge, radio shack, where celestial navigation and
on account of a slight physical
local
papers
here
about
the
ARMY,
Agent
aerials,
paint and storerooms in signaling could be taught.
defect. Right here a very short
"Between decks" the building
time ago one of your trainees
will house the stewards' depart­
, with one eye was refused a job
ment with a cafeteria, the pur­
on a NMU contract ship, as messser's
office and the classroom for
man. Yet you spend money to
instructing
students on freight
. train these men.
and
operation
duties.
Every citizen of this country
One fly in the ointment is the
has the right to earn his living
fact that Frank J. Taylor, Presi­
at the vocation that he chooses.
of standard physical examina­ Here is how many SIU agree­ dent of the Merchant Marine In­
{Continued from 'Page 1)
We in the SIU are not fellow
green
new
elements
entering
the
tions by the U. S. Public Health ments read in reference to phy­ stitute is a sponsor of the new
travelers and we did not start
industry
than
the
old-timers
who
Service
would eliminate the sical examinations:
project. No doubt Mr. Taylor has
going to sea yesterday, but it is
blackballing
of
seamen
by
doc­
know
the
score.
"In
the
event
any
decision
of
in
the back of his mind the pos­
about time that something is
Typical of Stalinist methods is tors employed by the shipowners. the Company Physician is chal­ sibility of transforming the pro­
done. Your conference in New
. Orleans was a flop. The situa­ the fact that Curran conspired He said that the government bu­ lenged by the Union as to the ject into a training school for
physical fitness of a union mem­ finks at the taxpayers' expense.
tion is getting serious, just on with the shipowners to slip this reau would be "impartial."
account of the phoney rules that one over. It was not until the
That is a laugh. The anti-labor ber, said member shall be re­ The unions will have to keep a
you hand down to your hand- NMU Headquarters meeting of activities of the War Shipping examined by a Public Health weather eye on this school.
picked and sponsored NMU job­ October 14 that the rank and file Administration, the Maritime Physician and his decision shall
got wind of what was up. But Commission and the Recruitment be binding."
holders.
prior to that Curran had been and Manning Organization has This system means that the MERCHANT MARINE
The day is coming, Mr. Di­
closeted with the shipowners, dispelled once and for aU any il­ first rejection of a man is in the
MAIL NOTICE
mock, this farce will bust wide
and government representatives, lusions about government bu­ hands of the shipowner, and
open, and it is about time that
denianding this "reform."
reaus' impartialitity between therefore subject to pi-essure from
Insured, C.O.D. or registered
Capt. Macauley had a good oldCurran attended the annual capital and labor. The seamen the union. Should the shipown­
fashioned house cleaning in the
mail
cannot be accepted for mati­
meeting of the Propeller Club on know that they seldom get a er launch a program of picking
ranks of the RMO and pump the
Oct. 12-14, (the marine division break from these shipowner off militant men by this method, ng to the personnel of the Am­
bilges.
of the National Association of dominated government boards, the union will find ways and erican Merchant Marine, accord­
It was like old home week the Manufacturers) and pressed his
ing to an announcement by Post­
past few days, ten members of medical plan before it's "wel­ and the less they have to do with means of stopping this—quick!
The Health Service, on the other master Albert Goldman. Many
the NMU have put their books fare" panel. Curran admitted them the better.
hand, not having primary con­ mailers prepare packages or other
To
fight
the
shipowners
when
in this office and have taken out this in the NMU membership
trol
of the rejection of men, is mail matter for registration, in­
they
fly
their
own
colors
is
one
SIU books and trip cards. I was meeting when he said (according
less
subject to shipowner pres­
thing,
but
to
fight
them
when
stumped at seeing them until I to the official minutes):
sure
and more apt to be impar­ surance or C.O.D. service and the
they
masquerade
as
"impartial
found out what the reason was: "I was your delegate to a Con­
Post Office wishes to avoid the
Kilgore is trying to freeze the vention today, a convention of government administrators" is tial.
to their ships. The NMU shipowners . . . that is the Pro­ something else again. We can Moreover, there are many' annoyance to the mailers incident
h seamen
lick them in their former capac­ lines which do not require any to the inability of the Post Office
is demanding members to sign peller Club."
ity—it's
not so easy in the latter. physical examination whatsoever. to accept such matter which
the dues check off cards. Result,
And then, far from being
easy money for the Komrades ashamed of rubbing stomachs That is why union men want These lines are efficiently man­ cannot be sent to destination.
for the next two years and with­ with the enemies of the seamen, as little government interference ned by capable crews of oldout doing anything for the mem- he bragged about his success in in the maritime industry as pos­ times, men who might be reject­
bersliip.
getting the shipowners to see his sible. We want the shipowners ed for some minor incapacity if
Had the pleasure of calling way concerning the medical ex­ to stay in their waterfront of­ they had to take a physical. Curthe RMO. They sent nle five aminations. The sight of Curran fices where we can get at them ran's plan would mean that all
trip card inen in the NMU. Re­ and the shipowners being palsy- and stay out of Washington lines would be forced to set up Crew of S. S. Daniel Huger
sult, sent back. This is to let all walsy on this question should where they can wrap themselves physical requirements—thus au­ which paid off Oct. 13. 1943. has
tomatically eliminating many linen money coming. Collect
hands know that we in the SIU- surprise no one—both of them in the American flag.
Mississippi Line. New York.
SUP do not stand outside of the are interested in getting rid of
If there are to be physical ex­ men now going to sea.
training schools,. handing out the old time, militant seamen. aminations, let them be conduct­ It is to be hoped that this latest Crew member Chamberlain has
trip cards and books to the grad- And what easier and cleaner ed by the shipowners and the attempted sell-out by Curran &amp; his Log lifted and can collect
from New York office when ho
I uates, as the. NMU.
method than by merely informing unions can see that it isn't used Company will really open the gets his linen money.
All beefs and disputes settled them they have high blood pres­ as a blacklist. But let them be eyes of those honest rank and
conducted by "impartial goyern- file members of the NMU who
to the satisfaction of all con­ sure?
ment" and the shipowner will be up to now hesitated to believe
In
trying
to
sell
this
finky
bill
cerned the past week. One of
Keep In Touch With
our staunch backers, Capt. Al- of goods to the membership, Cur­ able to exert influence to the de­ that the C.P. line in maritime is
essentially a fink line.
bert Hemphill, Sect. Master ran claimed that the setting up triment of the unions.
Your Draft Board

n

Curran Would Keep Old
Off The Ships

MONEY DUE

•'I

�• ~.^''&lt;j'-&gt;ri'^''^rT'.v^

Page Four

THE

SEAFARERS

'

LOG

Friday, November 12, 1943

Churchill-FDR Optomistie On Sub War
In a joint statement issued this
week at London and Washington,
President Roosevelt and Prime
Minister Churcliill revealed facts
and figures proving that during
the past few months the sub
menace in the Atlantic is not
only under control, but shows
signs of being eliminated. The
statement revealed that:
1. During the months of Aug­
ust, September and October ap
proximately sixty U-boats were
destroyed. This brings to more
than 150 the number of U-boats
destroyed during the last six
months. The record of the last
three months is particularly
gratifying because during most
of this period fewer U-boats were
operating, fewer targets were
presented for our air and sea
forces.
2. During August, September
and October more U-boats were
destroyed than Allied merchant
ships were sunk by U-boat ac­
tion. The ratio of U-boat to mer­
chant ship attrition during Oct­
ober was more satisfactory than
in any previous month. Our ton­
nage losses from all causes in
October were the second lowest
of any month of the war.
3. Merchant ship tonnage lost
to U-boat action during the last
three months was less than onehalf the merchant ship tonnage
lost during the previous three
months despite the fact that ac­
tual shipping increased.
4. The Germans have intro­
duced new U-boat weapons and
tactics. Thus far we have been
able to cope successfully with
the changing situation. The bat­
tle continues in full vigor.

&gt;'•

5-:

•r
£•

fer.;

t
jv. -

Is.'-

w

Of Ancient Vintage
(The Wino Craves a Ship)
Oh for a ship, a rare old ship
Bound for Fori of Hearts Desire,
Where a wino can lay in his bunk all day
With no work to raise his ire.
A special ship, a vintage ship
No watch for the crew to keep.
With barrels of beer on ice to cheer
We bound oe'r the bounding deep.
A trim tall ship, 'here take a nip'
With rust and paint unknown.
And all we do is partake of the brew
And hope we would never reach home.
An ancient ship, a wino ship
Without Captain, or Bosun or Mate
To disturb joyous spell by whistle or bell
And spoil the effects of the grape.
Oh, a rare old ship from Coenties Slip
With a cargo of port in the hold,
A draw every day to make poker pay
Why then we would never grow old.
A long joyous trip on a wino dream ship
A voyage like this do I crave.
All overtime pay where no one says "nay"
As we corkscrew over the wave.
Of course this ship is a non Union ship
No wino shall Union dues pay.
The shipowner too shipped out with the crew
With the corks popping into the bay.
But this perfect ship, I fear is a myth
No such on the deep can I find.
So look for the boom when you walk in to this room.
"The price of a drink, do you mind?"
—TOP AN' LIFT.

Washington Report
(Continued from Page 2)
the conditions that they had to
tolerate while he held the whip.
The reports are that he hates
anything connected with LABOR
and has made the statement that
if he had been on the job when
this outfit was organized there
would be ho Labor representa­
tion connected with it.
To prove his utter disregard
and contempt for Labor and what
" it stands for, this individual had
cards printed announcing the
- birth' of "IT'S A BOY" to Doro­
thy and James Moore, "THEIR
. THIRD HOWLING SUCCESS"
on cards without a union label.
' It is also reported that he has
-forced every employee who was
, working for the USS, who were
(-members of a seamen's union to
resign. This is the service that
' is being rendered to merchant
' seamen by persons who are alien
: to seamen's wishes and welfare.
If. this trends continues it won't
be long before the USS comes
out openly hostile to all seamen's
unions.
All right boys, drop a line to
the editor on how you find the
USS, and how these parasites
treat you. No doubt some of the
stories will shed a different light
on the pamphlets and other crap
put out by the USS.
Colored boys to him are lower
than Whale (
and they
are his particular meat. Any­
thing that he can do to make
them feel miserable, satisfies his

vain temporary autocratical pow­
er.
I'll list Mr. Marshall E. Dimock's stooges in his would-be
set up on "LABOR'S PART IN
WAR AND RECONSTRUC­
TION" and his attempt to saddle
seamen with enemies of their
welfare, who are alien and hos­
tile to union seamen.
Enemy No. 1. Craig. 'Vincent
RMO regional director. New
York City.
Enemy No. 2. Gladys Ogden
—Mr. Dimock's mbther-in-law.
WilBhire Hotel, New York City.
Enemy No. 3. James Stuart
Moore — USS port executive.
New York City.
Brothers, send in names and
reports of other phonies in the
RMO and USS so that we can
enter their names in our social
register and let the seamen w^o
arc risking their lives, while
these parasites live off of the
money that is panhandled from
the public, under the guise that
they are rendering welfare ser­
vice to merchant seamen, know
just who they are and what their
objective and feelings towards
seamen really are.
NWLB — War shipping panel
meeting that was to be held on
the Great Lak ;s case has been
postponed until November 11th.
The full panel meets on this day.

Keep In Touch With
Your Draft Board

Price Rollback A
Dud; Living Cost
Ships Named For
Trend Is Upward
Labor Leaders
(Continued from Page 1)

BRUNSWICK, Ga.—Two Lib­ that there arc wide variatio-.s in
prices in different parts of the
erty Ships, under constructipn country.
here by AFL workers at the J. For example, while the price
A. Jones Construction Co. yard, of women's fall coats has ad­
will be named for labor leaders, vanced generally, it has been
the U. S. Maritime Commission jacked up as much as 60 per
cent in some localities.
has announced.
Rents are also steadily edging
The men to be honored will be upward, as is the cost of services.
the late Patrick H. Morrissey, a In this connection, the report de­
former grand master of the clared:
Brotherhood of Railroad Train­ "The doUar haircut of World
men and the late John B. Len- War I has again made its ap­
non, AFL treasurer for 28 years. pearance in some cities, with 75
Morrissey, a charter member cents the usual charge, against
of the Bloomington, 111., lodge, the pre-war charge of 50 cents or
became national vice-grand mas­ less. There were also substantial
ter of the brotherhood in 1889 increases in the cost of medical
and served as grand master from and domestic services, admis­
1895 until 1909. He resigned from sions to motion pictures, and in
the brotherhood in 1909 to be­ prices for a variety of other
come president of the Railroad goods, including soaps and toilet
*
Employees and Investors Associ­ articles."
While
these
increases
cut
into
ation, later becoming vice-presi­
dent in charge of operation of the family budget, they do not
the Burlington Railroad. Morris­ appear in cost of living figures.
RULES ENCOURAGE
sey died November 28, 1916.
GOUGING
Lennon organized the tailor's
The
report
brings out in rather
union in 1884 and held the office
striking
fashion
a claim repeat­
of general secretary for 26 years.
He was elected treasurer of the edly made by organized labor
AFL in 1889, serving for 28 years. that OPA regulations encourage
During the administrations of profiteering by permitting manu­
Presidents Taft and Wilson, Len­ facturers and dealers to write
non was labor representative on their own price ticket on new
the U.S. Commission of Indus­ lines. Old established lines are
trial Relations. During World rapidly disappearing from the
War I, he was a conciliator for market and are being replaced
the Department of Labor. He by inferior merchandise imder
new names at prices far above
died Jan. 17, 1923.
OPA ceilings.
How this affects consumers is
illustrated by the high-handed
brigandage of the liquor indus­
try. Most of the old brands of !
whiskey, on which prices had
been established, are no longer
a special Presidential Board. obtainable, while literally scores
They are taking a strike vote of new products have been sub­
throughout the industry.
stituted. This has created a par­
Sidney Hillman, head of the adise for profiteers.
Amalgamated Clothing Workers,
has submitted a report to Presi­
dent Roosevelt warning him that
labor is revolting against the
present wage ceilings.
The United Steel Workers' exe­
MIKE DIKUN
cutive board has decided to re­
Your papers and discharges
open 1,300 collective bargaining have been turned into the Phila­
contracts and demand pay boosts delphia hall of the Union. Pick
for 900,000 members.
them up.

Labor Heat Thawing
Bosses' Wage Freeze
(Continued from Page 1)
$1.50 per day increase in pay for
fight and last week finaUy won
an extra hour's work. This boost
was granted by the War Labor
Board and constituted the first
Board decision which was in vio­
lation of the Little Steel For­
mula.
WLB chairman William Davis,
a bitter opponant of John L.
Lewis, President of the United
Mine Workers, was forced to ad­
mit that the wage restrictions
imposed by the government have
imposed "an unjust burden" on
the workers.
"As the months flow by and
the board continues to hold
wages to the general level of
Sept. 15, 1942," Davis said, "we
become increasingly conscious
of the fact that we are asking
one segment of our society to do
its part to protect all Americans
from the ravages of inflation
while, at the same time, a similar
obligation has not been placed as
heavily upon the shoulders of
some of the other segments of
this society."
In plain language, this is an
admission that the WLB policies
have resulted in suffering for the
workers and profiteering for the
employers.
Now that the wage ceiling has
been pierced by the Miners, it is
expected that several other pow­
erful unions will demand adjust­
ment of their wage schedules.
Rail labor leaders have just re^
jected a wage rise of 4 to 10
cents an hour awarded them by

'msonaU

^Justice

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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
CURRAN WOULD KEEP OLD TIMERS OFF THE SHIPS&#13;
LABOR HEAT THAWING BOSSES' WAGE FREEZE&#13;
SUP MAN'S PORTRAIT OF FURUSETH WINS ARTISTS' PRAISE&#13;
PRICE ROLLBACK A DUD; LIVING COST TREND IS UPWARD&#13;
COMMITTEE SEEKS FREEDOM OF DETAINED GREEK SEAMEN&#13;
CREW OF THE S.S. LAWTON B. EVANS "CREDIT TO MERCHANT MARINE"&#13;
N.Y. BOARD OF EDUCATION REVEALS PLAN FOR SETTING UP MARITIME HIGH SCHOOL&#13;
MERCHANT MARINE MAIL NOTICE&#13;
CHURCHILL-FDR OPTOMISTIC ON SUB WAR&#13;
OF ANCIENT VINTAGE&#13;
SHIPS NAMED FOR LABOR LEADERS&#13;
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I'"

iH;-

''i

OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
Vol. V.

NEW YORK. N.Y., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19. 1943

No. 33

Make Trainees Union Men—Hawk
CHISELING OPERATORS
STRAND U.S. SEAMEN
By a BOSUN
Despite the cry of the RMO
for experienced seamen in or­
der to transport the war goods
abroad, American shipowners
are deliberately stranding
rated men in the Caribbean
and filling their places with
n,atives who never went to sea
before. I know this is true be­
cause I was one of those
stranded and I saw how the
whole rotten business works.
The shipowners do this, of
course, because the natives
are not union men and will
not demand union wages and
conditions. The effect of this
move on the war effort means
nothing to the shipowners—
apparently.
My story begins on
1943 when I signed on an Al­
coa ship in • New York City.
My ship went to Trinadad and
from there spent three months
on a shuttle between
:.:v:;..A.
, and
It was during
this run that I saw with my
own eyes two American (sup­
posedly union) ships whose
decks were fully crewed by
natives who had been picked
up along the waterfront and
were being paid God-knowswhat. These two ships, the
S.S.
) and the S.S.
...) were fully crew­
ed by union men when they
first came south, but during

I;? '.I

their long run the original
crew had been forced ashore
one at a time on account of
illness. Each time a replace­
ment was needed, the ship,,owner would ignore the union
men begging for jobs in Port
of Spain, and hire natives
away from shore jobs.
This practice ha.s been going
on for a long time and when
I was in Port of Spain this
summer I found over 100 Am­
erican seamen who had been
stranded there. These men
had all gotten off their ships
for hospital treatment at dif­
ferent times, but found that
once they were ashore it was
impossible for them to ship
out again. And since the
Army and Navy would not
give them priority transporta­
tion back to the States, they
were stranded in this port
without any means of making
a living. They were becoming
regular beachcombers.
When ever an American
ship would put in and call for
replacements, these men
would beg for the jobs, but no
go. The unorganized natives
got the jobs.
A couple of native replace­
ments came aboard' my ship
and I found that they not only
had never been to sea but
they did not even have the
seamen's certificates as requir­
ed by law.

The American seamen that
are thus stranded in Port of
Spain are treated like a bunch
of cattle by the shipowners'
agents and by the American
consular service. They are
given no aid whatsoever and
the general attitude seems to
be that they shouldn't have
gotten sick in the first place
and been forced to pile off the
ships.
It is hard to even describe
the despondency of these men
and the hovels they are forced
to live in and the food they
are forced to eat. If they
could hear all the ballyho
back here in the states about
seamen being heroes and how
grateful the nation was to
them, it sure would give them
a belly laugh—^that is, if their
stomachs hadn't shrunk too
much to prevent it.
I should like to say in clos­
ing that Mr. Naggs, Alcoa
Agent in Port of Spain is
fully aware of this situation
and as far as I could see, do­
ing absolutely nothing about
it. As for the American consul,
he wouldn't even see us and
listen to our problems. It is
impossible, however, that he
is ignorant of the treatment
given the seamen in this port.
At least these gentlemen sure
gave me the brush off When I
went to them for help in get­
ting out of that hell hole.

The problem of making union men out of the RMO
trainees is a serious one and has not been given suflScient
attention by either SIU port officials or the rank and file
old timers aboard ships, according to Brother John Hawk,
Secretary-Treasurer of the District,
In presenting a resolution on^
the subject to headquarters forced by a back-log of potential
meeting two weeks ago. Brother finks—men who think that the
Hawk asked that greater educa­ way to get ahead is by playing
tional efforts be directed toward lone wolf and sucking around the
the new men, and that no man aft quarters of the brass hats and
be rejected for SIU membership swivil chair artists.
unless his conduct labeled him The old timers must face these
anti-union. Even then, formal facts: (1) the majority of the
charges should be placed against trainees are in the industry to
the individual. Hawk said, and stay, and (2) their numbers are
the charges should be aired be­ such that they are a force to be
fore the membership and a for­ reckoned with. The degree of
union consciousness developed in
mal vote taken on the case.
these
men may well prove to be
The majority of the green kids
the
decisive
factor in the post
now flooding the industry will
war
fight
between
the SIU and
not automatically become union
the
shipowners.
men by the mere fact of riding
In order to place a brake upon
a union ship. These trainees now
wholesale
rejection of trainees,
work under good conditions, and
the
SIU
has
passed the following
they do not fully understand just
resolution
up
and down the
how these conditions were won.
coast:
They did not walk the picket
All men after having made
lines and eat out of the soup
a
trip on an Atlantic and Gulf
kitchens. They have yet to feel
District
contracted vessel shall
the lash of , the profit-hungry
be
joined
into the union, unless
shipowner, temporarily held in
a
written
recommendation
check by the war emergency. In
signed
by
three
full book mem­
short, these new men have no
bers
to
reject
the man from
real understanding of the class
the
union
is
submitted
to a
struggle.
regular
meeting
and
concurred
It is the responsibility of all
union 'men to take time out to in. In cases where no branch
meeting is held, the Branch
talk to these kids, to give them
Agent shall spread the rejec­
the facts of life. Make no mis­
tion
recommendation in full in
take, if these trainees know the
the
Branch
Agent's weekly re­
score, they'll be on the right side
port including the signers'
when the line up takes shape for
names and book numliers of
the next struggle. But fail to
educate them, and the union will the recommendation in order
soon face the shipowners rein­
(^Continued on Page 4)

RMO Tightens Finky Grip
On Seamen Deferment Set-Up

I' i

On completion of the 5.000th fur vest produced by the Los
Angeles fur vest project for United Nations seamen, Capt. Wal­
ter Treadway of USS presents a scroll of honor to Man. J.
Miller (center) of Local 87, International Fur &amp; Leather Workers
Union (CIO) and Man. Louis Pine (right) of the Los Angeles
Joint Board, International Ladies Garment Workers Union
(AFL).
- T. ..

&amp;£: • •, ••

A
.. /

The RMO took another hitch
in the rope around the neck of
merchant seamen this week
when it issued new Army defer­
ment regulations which entirely
eliminated the union's past par­
ticipation in the Selective Ser­
vice machinery. Whereas in the
past the union dispatcher was
charged with notifying the RMO
when a man shipped out, the
new method will by-pass the
union entirely and all correspon­
dence will be between the ship­
owner, the RMO and the draft
boards.
Not that we particularly care
whether the union is included in
the RMO procedure or not, for
the whole scheme stinks of to­
talitarian coercion and the less
the. SIU has to do with it the
better we'll like it. We only re­
port this development to bear
out what we said when the RMO
first moved to grab jurisdiction
over the draft status of the sea­

men—that is, that the apparatus
set up in this manner would
gradually be ti-ansformed into a
club with which to beat organiz­
ed labor over the head. This last
step is certainly a move in that
direction.
The RMO now has complete
and undisputed jurisdiction over
the deferment or induction of
seamen into the army. If this
isn't a threat to union activity—
then we never saw one. The
SIU-SUP is not caught unaware
by this development, wc fought
the RMO on this question from
the first. We boycotted their en­
tire card system for months, and
it was only the servile surrender
of the NMU, thus splitting the
ranks of maritime labor, which
forced our final acceptance of the
plan. We said frankly at the
time, and we repeat today, were
we strong enough we wquld
throw the whole finky RMO and
its anti-labor schemes right out

the window. Unfortunately, with
maritime labor split, we are not
strong enough to do this—at
least not in war time. Therefore
we have no alternative but to go
along for the time, and to advise
every member to carefully ob­
serve aU the RMO regulations so
as not to get caught short. When
the war ends and the shipowners
really open up on the union, we'll
need every man in his place on
the picket lines. So don't get
fouled up now and find yourself
jerked out of the industry.
Here is an explaination of how
the new RMO regulations oper­
ated.
Under the new method, a
single form, WSA-61, consisting
of a white original and a pink
carbon copy, will replace the fa­
miliar green and buff cards
known as forms WSA-47 and
WSA-48. Use of the latter forms
are to be discontinued as of mid(Co It fin lied on Page 3)

�•' \

Pago Two

ssawwai

THE

8IS.&amp;;

SEAFARERS

Friday. NoTember 19. 1943 1

LOG

J

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

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

HARRY LUNDEBERG

------

President

110 Market Street, San Francbco, Calif.

JOHN HAVK

------- Secy-Treas.

p. 6. Box 25, Station P., New York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE

- - -

Washington Rep,

424 Sth Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
•

•

Directory of Branches
PHONE

ADDRES3

BRANCH

NEW YORK (4)
2 Stone St.
BOwIIng Green 9-3437
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North t^y St
Calvert 4539_.
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St.
Lombard 765 I
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS (16) ..309 Chartrea St
Canal 3336
CAVANNAH
.218 East Bay St.
.Savannah 3-1728
TAMPA...:::.:: 423 East puu st
Tampa MM. 1323
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St
Dial 2-1392
PUERTO RICO
45 Ponce de Leon
L"?""
J.JT?
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-8043
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway. .. Ft. Lauderdale 1601

nr

-w

T.

PUBLICATION OFFICE:
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8345
~

Z67

Plan For Natl. Service
Act Is Hit By Labor,
Farmers, Business
WASHINGTON, Nov. 13—Representative of agrifculture and industrial management this week joined labor
in condemning for the ash can all proposals for national
servic legislation, which would recruit workers for jobs and
tie them to them for the duration of the war.
In a statement signed by the*————
"
;
;
—
nine members of the national "1. The American people will
Management-Labor Policy Com­ provide greater output under a
mittee of the War Manpower voluntary system than under one
Commission, a continuation of of compulsion and regimentation.
the voluntary method of recruit­ "2. The present critical man­
ing workers was urged, and a power situations are results of
positive program, with pledges dislocations, mal - distribution of
contracts, and ineffective man­
to back it up, was offered..
power utilization rather than of
Signing the statement were;
inadequate over-all supply of
For Labor: CIO Pres. • Philip
labor.
Murray, AFL Pres. William
"3. The solution depends upon
Green and Pres. H. W. Fraser of
leadership,
coordinated and un­
the Order of Railway Conductors
derstood
plans,
and efficient ad­
of America.
ministration, not upon broadened
For Industry: Pres. Frederick
control and regulation.
C. Crawford, Natl. Assn. of Man­
ufacturers; Pres. Eric A. John­ '•4. Fully effective mobilization
ston, U. S. Chamber of Commerce and utilization of the national
and R. Conrad Cooper, Asst. manpower will be achieved.
vice-president, Wheeling Steel When all agencies of government
concerned with procurement,
Corp.
• For Agriculture: Pres. James production and manpower are
G. Patton, Natl. Fai'mers Union; administered under a coordinated
Pres. Edward A. O'Neal, Ameri­ and well understood arrangement
can Farm Bureau Federation, in which government defines the
and Albert S. Goss, master of the war needs, enunciated the funda­
mental policies or 'rules of the
Natl. Grange.^
game,' confines itself to a mini­
The committee report said that mum of control and administra­
the members "believe that the tive detail, and provides the
people of this nation are unsur­ maximum of real assistance to
passed in initiative, resourceful­ those who must do the work,
ness, and the will to do when namely the people of this nation
their course is clear.
in each conimunity."
"They (the committee mem­
bers) are opposed to National Our American corporation sur­
War Service Legislation in the pluses— reserves and undivided
unanimous belief that compul­ profits — now amount to over
sion in any form, whether by law $50 billion—inclusive of $24 bil­
or by administrative order, does lion of government bonds most
not go to the heart of the prob­ of which are tax-exempt.
lem. They believe the need goes
beyond that which can be secur­
Keep In Touch With
ed by compulsion.
"They are convinced that:
Your Draft Board

Mil

fRtPORT on.
.^ASHItAOTOIV.

TTT'-^

• Bv MATTHEW Du&amp;MAME-a • ^

prove of the following voluntary
NATIONAL
agreements.
WAR LABOR BOARD
Attended a conference of the Ashley &amp; Dustin SS Company
War Shipping Panel. The session and the SIU Great Lakes Dist.
commenced on Thursday, Nov­ Cleveland &amp; Buffalo SS Company
ember 11th, and ended Saturday, and the SIU Great Lakes Dist.
Wisconsin &amp; Michigan SS Com­
November 13th.
pany and the SIU Great Lakes
On July 14th, 1943, the Na­
District.
tional War Labor Board estab­
lished this panel in the maritime These agreements covered the
industry to expedite all maritime Stewards department. There
cases, and to also have persons were some wage increases based
who are familiar with the indus­ upon particular job-classifica­
try sit on the panel and make tions, and differences of work in­
recommendations to the board on volved, other than the regional
all voluntary agreements and board's ruling in the D &amp; C
Company and the SIU Great
disputed cases.
Lakes
District.
Since the establishment of this
The matter of the panel's rec­
panel, several attempts have
been made to set up a policy ommendations on the 26 S^
that is favorable to all concerned. Companies and the SIU G. L.
Very little progress has been District has not been settled. In­
made due to the CIO's attempt dustry and public member are
to dominate the panel's policy. of the opinion that they cannot
In the board's order of July go along on any other proposi­
14th it states, "The labor mem­ tion, than that rendered by the
bers of the panel shall be chosen board to the Lake Carriers Asso­
from crafts and industrial groups ciation— Bonus payable at the
whose membership may be in­ termination of the season. My
volved in matters within juris­ opinion on the matter is that the
diction of the panel. The labor board should grant the same
member of the panel sitting in bonus privilages to the employ­
each case shall be a member ers with whom the SIU had in
chosen from the craft or indus­ their contracts before the board
trial group involved in the case upset the established bonus pro
before the panel, or such labor visions, namely bonus payable at
member as he may designate." the end of thirty days.
Other cases before the panel
The position of all the AFL mari­
were
several tow boat operators
time representatives on the panel
from
the
gulf coast and the Miss­
is that on all AFL cases the
issippi
river,
requesting wage
union involved in the case shall
have an AFL representative sit schedule approval by the board.
on the panel. The CIO has taken All of the wage requests were
the position that both the AFL lower than those paid by com­
and CIO labor member shall sit panies than the SIU have under
in on all cases regardless of what contract in the Gulf. Efforts
should be made to organize all
organization is involved.
At the first meeting of the the tow boats in the gulf. If
panel this same dispute occured. enough of these tow boat oper­
In that meeting the chairman ators wage scale become approv­
outlined the policy of how aU ed in the Gulf, they automatic­
cases were to be heard. The po­ ally set mode for that kind of
sition of the chairman was sim- work, and no wage scale above
iliar to the position taken by the the mode will then be approved
AFL representatives. To date all by the board.
On Saturday the 13th, case of
cases have been handled in the
manner outlined under the the MM&amp;P-MEBA, for a uniform
standard agreement came up.
board's order.
On Thursday the CIO again Chairman stated that this was
renewed their claim for joint only a preliminary discussion on
representation on the panel. The
whole day was wasted in arguing
the point. Final outcome was
that the panel voted on a resolu­
tion requesting the board for a
clarification on the board's order.
The AFL representatives voted
against the resolution on the
grounds that the boards order
specifically states how the panel
shall handle aU cases.
If the NWLB rules that there
shall be joint representation on
all cases, this means that when
any AFL mafitime union negoti­
ates an agreement with an em­
ployer, the CIO can vote not to
recommend approval of the
agreement, and is in a position
to sabotage any agreement that
is reached between the union
and the employer. It gives them
the voting power to interfere
with the final outcome of our col­
lective bargaining.
On Friday, a panel consisting
of Edmund M, Morgan, Chair­
man and Public member, Chester
W. Willett Industry Member,
Yours truly Labor member, rec­
ommended that the board ap­

the matter. He also stated thaf
Admiral Land has indicated that
the WSA is in favor of a uniform'
agreement for the licensed per-«
sonnel, and has notified all gen­
eral agents of the WSA to meet
with representatives of the
MM&amp;P-MEBA for the purpose of
arriving at a uniform agreement.
The operators contended that
they' have requested Admiral
Land to clarify letters that wer®
sent to WSA general agents re­
garding this matter and that they
were waiting for a reply. They
also stated that they have not
had the opportunity to negotiate
with the unions, due to several
conflicting letters from the WSA.
The union took the position thafi
the operators are staUing. IWfr,
Morgan chairman of the panel
stated that in his opinion the op­
erators have had ample time tO
sit down with the unions, and
has designated the first Thursday
in December Jor this case to be
heard.
4

«

*

M. Weisberger, SUP Agt, Nev^
York—Re: Crew of S.S. Morrisoai
R. Waite claim for transporta­
tion. This case was taken up
with the WSA and they advised
me that the master of the vessel
had made a mistake in not sign­
ing on the crew with WSA in­
struction No. 64 being incorpor­
ated into the articles. My posi­
tion was that the articles super­
seded any outside agreement or
instructions to the contrary. At
that time they advised me that
they would send a letter to th®
New York agent of the WSA
position on this matter.
Since that time two other west
coast ships signed on articles in
the Gulf and instruction No. 64
was also left out of the articles.
The WSA has advised me that
they are willing to pay tha
transportation as provided under,
instruction No. 64 on these tw6
vessels, but are not willing to
authorize payment on the M. R,
Waite. I am of the opinion that
the crew that signed on the
Waite are entitled to transporta;{Continued on Page 4)

...m

�•

Friday, November 19. 1943

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page ThiMi
""t-l

WHArS DOING

Around the Ports

New Post Regulations
For Merchant Seamen

Seafarers International Union
'
Of North Amrrica
2 Stone Street
For instance, this week I suc­ operators with Seafarers' Inter­
NEW YORK
New York, New York
ceeded in collecting overtime for national Union agreements
In covering various ships in two brothers who were instruct­ About 85% of the ships being Gentlemen:
the past weeks I have encount­ ed in a port in North Africa to built in the South Atlantic dis­
This will supplement our letter to you of December 31, 1942
ered a number of beefs concern­ use an Army truck to secure
trict
is
being
alloted
to
compan­
(copy
attached), with reference to mail service to and from mem­
supplies
two
miles
away
from
ing some RMO male or skipper
bers
of
the crews of American merchant vessels. ^
the
dock.
We
collected
5
hours
ies
north
of
Hatteras
and
the
ordering garbage dumped in for­
The
following changes have become advisable in the mail pro­
overtime
for
them,
even
though
South Atlantic Steamship Com­
eign ports or docks and then re­
cedure
since
its inception on January 1, 1943, and are now in effect:
the
home
office
had
at
first
dis­
pany
has
to
go
all
the
way
out
to
fusing to OK the overtime. In
(1)
Included
in this service will now be members of the crews
all agreements it is deck depart­ allowed it. All this because the the West Coast to take out ships.
of
Allied
merchant
vessels oVfer 200 gross tons, under War Shipping
ment work. But you see if any Brothers involved kept accurate There seems to be something
Administration
control,
as weU as American members of the crews
records,
dates
and
places,
and
I
rotten in Denmark somewhere.
Stewards Department member
of
Allied
or
AUied-controUed
merchant vessels subject to such se­
had
something
concrete
to
go
on,
When they are talking about sav­
refused to obey such an order,
curity
regulation
for
the
handling
of mail as may be prescribed by
even though it is deck work, Remember, your best guaran­ ing money, it seems the sensible
the
Allied
control
having
jurisdiction
over the vessel.
these men would bo called be­ tee of collecting is to hold your thing to do would be to allot
(2)
Reports
indicate
that
considerable
quantities of mail for
fore the Coast Guard when they overtime slips for the shore pa­ ships to a company that is close
merchant
crews
are
being
returned
to
the
United
States from over­
to a yard where they are being
arrived back in the first U. S. trolmen.
seas
ports,
due
to
a
lack
of
interest
on
the
part
of
seamen and their
built.
port and their papers would be
CLAUDE
FISHER,
failure
to
call
for
it.
Masters
have,
therefore,
been
instructed that
at stake. The only solution to
Whenever we have to call on
when
arriving
at
ports
outside
of
the
United
States,
they or duly
N.
Y.
Stewards
Patrolman
this is to stick the shipowner for
our nearest union hall for men
authorized
detailed
members
of
the
crew,
should
call
for mail at
overtime everytime it happens.
to fill out a crew, they always
the
U.S.
Navy
Fleet
Post
Office,
or
in
the
absence
of
a
Fleet Post
In this connection it is import­
put up a big holler about not
SAVANNAH
Office,
at
the
office
of
the
Naval
Observer,
Marine
Post
Office,
Army
ant that all men hold onto their
authorizing transportation, but it
^ost
Office,
other
U.S.
postal
activity,
or
American
Consulate
iff
overtime slips. A lot of good
is all right for them to ship
the
order
named.
Here's a new one for the book: gandy dancers all over the coun­
overtime is bureaucratically cut
(3) Members of merchant crews of merchant ships calling at
off by the home office, and unless Seems as if the NMU and the try.
'oreign
ports are having considerable correspondence forwarded to
Maritime
Commission
has
cook­
the men have their slips it is dif­
Just finished crewing up a hew ihem in care of American consulates, A.P.O.'s, shipping agents for
ed
up
a
new
one.
Seems
that
all
ficult for the patrolmen to settle
Liberty ship for the South At­
the beef. But if you keep ac­ the surplus ships being built on lantic Steamship Company with the steamship line in a foreign port, etc. This is absolutely contrary
to regulations and defeats security. Seamen are, tlierefore, caution­
curate track and present the the Pacific Coast, that cannot be a complete union crew.
ed to refrain from the practice of communicating this information
whole thing to the patrolmen it handled by West Coast operators,
CHARLES WAID, Agent to anyone in the Urdted States. Letters thus addressed will be ab­
is being alloted to East Coast
will be a different story.
solutely stopped by the censors in this country and not delivered(4) Seamen should advise their correspondents in this country,
prior to their departure from a continental U. S. Port, to assure
that mail addressed to them should be in accordance with the fol­
lowing form.

RMO Tightens Finky Grip
On Seamen Deferment Set-Up

Mrs. T. Smith
following information: The sea­ the seaman's name and the date
{Contimied from Page 1)
when
he
must
ship
again
and
in
1022 Marble Street
night last Sunday. Moreover, the man's name, number of certific­
procedure has been so stream­ ate of identification or continuous addition an instruction stating in
New York, New York
lined that its operation will now discharge book, his rating, date part as follows:
"This form is the basis of ob­
revolve chiefly around the RMO when employment on the ship
taining and maintaining your
John T. Smith
central office in Washington, on began, the port where he joined,
draft deferment. You should
the' one hand, and the shipown­ local draft board number, order
SB PRESIDENT JACKSON
take up any draft board diffi­
ers. Included are ships of the number, year of birth and, in ad­
Army Transport Service, which dition, the names of the shipping culties with your union hiring
c/o Postmaster
hall, with the personnel office
are sailed by civilian masters company and ship and the mas­
of
the
steamship
company,
or
and crews. The new plan will ter's signature.
''Neiv York, New York
with a port office of the Re­
give the Washington office the Section B and C of the form
cruitment and Manning Or­
necessary information for filing are contained only on the pink
ganization.
IMPORTANT; You
copy
and
are
to
be
kept
in
the
I" with a local-draft board a Form
(Name of Steamship Line)
II 42-A. This is the instrument for ship's records until the seaman's are to reship by the 'Date to
ship again.' This date was
establishing a seaman's status in employment on the ship is ended.
calculated by allowing two
the Selective Service system. A This may be after the first voy­
days ashore for every 7 on
form 42-A must be filed every six age or one or more subsequent
(4) Hereafter it will be permissible for seamen to place their
voyages! At that time the master ship, with a minimum of 4 and return address on letters enclosed in envelopes (but not on the out­
months.
Under the former system, now will fill out on Section B the a maximum of 30 days. If you side of envelopes). This is an important change and will enable
to be supplanted, various fixed date when employment ended, are between the ages of 18 and seamen to communicate to their correspondents in this coimtry the
65, be sure to keep your draft name of the vessel on which they are serving and instruct their
responsibilities were divided, re- the' port of pay-off and the date
board informed of your address relatives and friends as to how to address mail to them properly.
ictively, among operating when the seaman is required to
or
you may be declared delin­ As heretofore, seamen are cautioned not to include in their letters
ipanies, maritime unions, all ship again under the Selective
quent
and be classified 1-A."
Service
provisions
for
shore
leave
individual seamen and the cen­
any other reference to names (other than as above) of either their
between
voyages.
The
master
On the reverse side of the pink own or other ships, movements, ports touched, or any similap
tral, regional and port offices of
will then sign Section B and mail copy are detailed instructions to information.
RMO.
The new instruction covers all it to the RMO central offce to be masters of vessels covering vari­
Please disseminate this information among the various members
active merchant seamen employ­ paired with the white copy. The ous possible exceptions to the of your organization in order to familiarize them with the foregoing
ed on vessels under the Ameri­ process will be repeated when rules, as well as the basic rou­ changes. It is suggested that bulletins be posted in your halls to
can, Philippine, Honduran or the seaman signs on his next tine. There is also instruction 4 acquaint the seamen to this effect.
Panamanian flag which are en­ ship. If the seaman were to sail which states:
Very truly yours,
"This document contains In­
gaged in coastal, intercoastal or continuously with the same ship,
HUBERT WYCKOFF
offshore shipping and owned by no repetition of the process formation affecting the nation­
Director, Division of Maritime
or under charter to the War would be necessary; the white al defense of the United States
Labor Relations
within the meaning of the Es­
Shipping Administration, or on a copy mailed to Washington in
pionage Act, 50, U.S.C., 31 and •Mail for crew complements on ships sailing from East Coast ports
vessel of the Army Transport the first instance would consti­
tute
the
RMO
central
office
rec­
32,
as amended. Its transmis­ will be addressed c/o Postmaster, N, Y.; from Gulf Coast ports,
Service.
sion or the revealation of its c/o Postmaster, New Orleans, La.; from West Coast port, c/o Post­
The form WSA-61, entitled ord.
In the case of a seaman who
contents in any manner to an master, San Francisco, Calif.
"Record of Service in Merchant
unauthorized person is prohib­
Marine," consists of three sec­ fails to join his ship, the white
the new arrangement to refer the other hardship in the man's fam­
ited by law."
tions. The white original of the copy of the form filled out for
Whenever a seaman wishes an question to the local draft board ily and enrollment in courses for
form and the pink carbon copy him is to be mailed along with
both contain Section A, identical the white copies for the other extension of allowable shore or Selective Service headquart­ up-grading or officer candidate
on both, which the master of a crew members. But the pink leave on account of extenuating ers with which the seaman will training in a school maintained
vessel is required to fill out in copy for this seaman is to be circumstances, the new regula­ have been registered. The Selec­ or approved by the U. S. Mari­
duplicate for each seaman whose completed by the master writing tions authorize the regional or tive Service, board instead will time Service.
employment on the ship is com­ in on Section B the words "Fail­ port offices of RMO to grant any communicate with the RMO All maritime unions have been
mencing. At sailing time the ed to join ship" and the date. justifiable extension up to 30 whenever for any reason a sea­ supplied with cancelled copies ol
master will give the white orig­ This pink copy will then be mail­ days, the regional or port office man's status seems in question. Form 61 for their representatives
will forward the information to Among circumstances recognized
inals. covering his entire crew, to ed with the white copy.
so that all members may be
the last person to leave the ship, Section C is a stub which the the RMO central office with its as extenuating are illness, effects
for mailing to the RMO central master will fill out and give to recommendations. In neither.in­ of enemy action requiring rest or properly informed of their rights
office. Section A will include the the seaman to keep. It contains stance will it be necessary under treatment, serious illness or and obligations.

GJ

�BBElaSii.

Page Four

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, November 19, 1943

Union Welfare Demands Close
Attention To RMO Graduates
m NEW CARGO
{Continued from Page 1)
SHIPS DELIVERED
-lhat action may be taken at
Branches where meetings are
. WASHINGTON — American
held.
»
merchant
ehipy.?.rd.s 'in
_r
In explaining this motion
Hawk said, "There has been a delivered 163 cargo vessels ag­
regular flood of rejected trip gregating 1,675,311 deadweight
cards coming into the headquar­ tons, bringing the total 1943 de­
ters during the past few months. liveries to 1,524 ships, totaling WASHINGTON, Nov. 18 —
In many cases ships with less 15,501,624 deadweight tons, the More than a fourth of the em­
than 6 full book members have Maritime Commission announced. ployes involved in wage adjust­
rejected as many as 20 trip card October production surpassed ment cases of the War Labor
men without explaining their ac­ that of September by three ves­ Board in September earned less
tions and giving the men a hear­ sels, 22,540 deadweight tons of than 50 cents an hour, states the
ships. During the month, yards WLB's seventh monthly report.
ing.
"While many men have been delivered 98 Liberty Ships, eight Some 77 per cent averaged less
rejected merely because the book C-type cargo vessels, 16 standard than 80 cents an hour, while 4.3
men were prejudiced against tankers, 19 emergency tankers per cent averaged less than 40
trainees or didn't like the way (modified Liberty Ships), three cents.
they parted their hair. If the T-1 or coastal tankers, two pri­ In a section on incentive plans,
present rate of rejections con­ vate coastal tankers, five seago­ the Board said that action on
tinues, hundreds of new men ing tugs, one ore carrier, three such pi'oposals "will be limited
(potentially good union men, if concrete barges, and eight special to a determination of whether or
the old timers would spend a types for military use.
not the proposed plan is in con­
few hours explaining the score to Of the total deliveries, 76 ships formance with the national sta­
•them) will be driven away from were delivered by West Coast bilization program and would re­
the SIU and into either the NMU yards; East Coast yards turned sult in unauthorized wage rate
or the fink ships. In cither case, out 51 vessels, 29 vessels were decreases or increases."
this organization is cutting off its delivered by yards on the Gulf
hose to spite its face if it does Coast, and seven ships were pro­ Only plans submitted volun­
not spend some effort and time duced by Great Lakes builders. tarily by employers or plans
October deliveries put the agreed upon by employers and
in developing these new men.
Commission
within 3,388,376 unions which have collective
"While it is the right of the
deadweight
tons
of its announced bargaining rights with the com­
jriembership to reject any one
goal
of
18,890,000
deadweight pany concerned will be consid­
they see fit, still this process
tons
of
merchant
ships
for 1943. ered.
must be conducted in any or­
ganized manner and in a way
that will mean justice for every­
one. The minimum requirement
must certainly be that the re­
jected men have complaints
brought against them in writing
and that these complaints be
cover some government agency
{Continued from Page 2)
given a hearing before the mem­
wherein they have no jurisdic­
tion to the Pacific Coast as per tion, the crews are taking a
bership.
"We don't want finks in our the ships articles, regardless of chance of being the losers in any
Philadelphia, Pa.
union, but green kids are not whether the master made a mis­ deal that they may agree to. Play
November 9, 1943
necessarily finks. Many of them take. This will require a lawyer safe, there is nothing like get­ Dear Joe:
will be the backbone of our or­ to enter suit to collect. There ting all terms of a contract in
ganization in years to come. They may be a possibility to get the writing. If a party tries to re­ There was a ship in Philadel­
should be given a chance to coast guard to compell the com­ pudiate a contract that has been phia not long ago and for 5 days
prove themselves before getting pany to live up to the ship's ar­ put in writing, the courts are at no one, not even the delegate,
ticles and pay off.
the bums rush."
our disposal. Otherwise we have called the hall. It seems a little
unreasonable but believe me Joe,
J. K. Shaughnessey, SIU Agt. nothing to fight with.
it's
the truth, so help me. This
Fort Lauderdale — Seamen who
would
never have happened had
are employed by General Agents
NEW
CARGO
ROUTES
B.
been
on that ship.
of the WSA are entitled to the
protection afforded to other The failure of the U-boat cam­ Well, its a damn shame that
workers
under the National La­ paign during recent weeks has he and a good number of men
Brother Frank Donnally is laid
like him' have been lost due to
VP in Ellis Island Hospital in bor Relations Act, and can call brought about an improved ship­ enemy action.
New York. He would like to re­ upon this agency for an election. ping situation in the Atlantic,
Another thing that isn't quite
ceive a visit from any of his old Don't let any one in this agency and consequently the War Ship­ up to hoil these days Joe, is the
give you the run around, have ping Administration will prob­
.shipmates. He is in Ward 25.
them give you a statement in ably go ahead with plans to re­ men beefing about changing
» «• »
quarters, etc., after signing ships
. The following brothers have writing if they refuse to grant shuffle a number of commercial articles and then when they ar­
packages in the New York any seamen an election.
cargo routes. These changes may rive in a loading port start their
Agent's office:
Army, SIU Agt. N. O.—Re; come in the form of diversions, beefing. In the not too far away
Christensen, H. Martin
Lesli Kohl, wiper on the S.S. shifting some operations from the days to remember, all these con­
Corsa, James
.John C. Spencer. Company Pacific to the Atlantic and Gulf ditions were remedied in the port
Dietrich, Edward
claims that they paid him 100% ports, as well as others from New where one joined the ship before
Fowler, Harold
bonus from July 8th 1943 to Oct­ York to Southern ports, it was they signed the ships articles.
Fitzgerald, Niel
ober 25th 1943. Recheck on this reported.
Another thing strikes me as
Hammargren. Vincsnl
and advise whether company's Reports from the Pacific Coast rather queer Joe, and it is this;
Hamsy, Clyde
-statement is correct. Re: West indicate thf.t it is the WSA's in­ when a trip card man was sent
Hanke. Adam
Coast crews signing on ships and tention to divert to the East aboard a ship in the good old
Kaney, William
Instruction No. 64 being omitted Coast this month Ml commercial days he was schooled in the art
. Kelley, Jesse
from the articles. U. S. Shipping cargo services which have been of unionism and what was to be
Klauber. Perry
commissioners are not authorized performed between Pacific Coast expected of him. But nowadays,
Klieger, Harry
to make any statement for the ports of" the United States and in some cases, you are asked by
Lukkarila, Edwin
WSA. If shipping commissioner India. A similar diversion is be­ the tripcarder if he joins the
- Miles, C. H.
makes statements which are not ing considered with respect to union what will he get out of it.
Olmstead, Frank
in writing or these statements Australia and New Zealand.
You would think that after a
Perkins, Walter
trip this question is slightly out
Turner, J. D.
of order, you would think that
^ Walker, Willie
ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
the man already knows what he
would get out of the union, es­
WEEK OF NOVEMBER 1st TO 6th
pecially if some union brother
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL
was to take time out to explain
our strikes for conditions and
SHIPPED
789
274
355
160
: Crew which paid off S.S. Alcoa
etc. ''
I tell you Jpe, things are dif­
Voyager in Sept. 1943, has $10 ^
REGISTERED
689
217
261
211
ferent nowadays. Instead of the
linen money coining. Collect 17
tripcarders fighting to join the
Battery Place. New York City.

Show 25 Pet.
Earn Less Than
50 Cents An Hour

Washington Report A Pie Card Unburdens
Himself To Pal "Joe"

IVK'

m--.

Is

••••'' i--'

MONEY DUE

union, in some cases the union
official almost has to fight them
to join.
Some of these tripcarders are
under the impression that they
can get off the ship they are on'
and not join the union in the
port that they pay off in, but
go to the port that they shipped
out of and join there. Of course,
this is all wrong, but unless one '
of the crew members explains
this to these boys they are liable,
to think that they owe a debt of
gratitude to the agent that ship­
ped them out, therefore that Is.
where they want to take their
Book out.
•
..TThings. like this can be. easily
remedied if the boys would have'
a little get-together before the
ship's arrival in a final pay off
port, and explain these things to
the prospective new members. I
don't know if it wouldnT be agood idea if each agent Uiat ships
a trip card man gives him, along'
with his trip card, an application
for, membership blank, and in­
struct him to fill it out a day or twd before the ship arrives back '
in the states and have a com-'
mittee of 5 book members sign it^
for him and also instruct him to*
take out his book and pay all
his obligations to the union in
the port where he pays off.
The more I think of the idea
the better I like it. What do you
think, Joe?
Well, Joe, I guess that I have
bent your Moose cars long,
enough, but before I close, I must,
say that things are about the
same here in the City of. Broth-;
erly Love, so until I see you.
remain as ever, your Pal,
. j
Book No. 496 •
f

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                <text>Vol. V, No. 33</text>
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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
MAKE TRAINEES UNION MEN--HAWK&#13;
CHISELING OPERATORS STRAND U.S. SEAMEN&#13;
RMO TIGHTENS FINKY GRIP ON SEAMEN DEFERMENT SET-UP&#13;
PLAN FOR NATL. SERVICE ACT IS HIT BY LABOR, FARMERS, BUSINESS&#13;
NEW POST REGULATIONS FOR MERCHANT SEAMEN&#13;
163 NEW CARGO SHIPS DELIVERED&#13;
SHOW 25 PCT. EARN LESS THAN 50 CENTS AN HOUR&#13;
A PIE CARD UNBURDENS HIMSELF TO PAL "JOE"</text>
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                    <text>OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
Vol. y.

Censors Ease
Restriction
On News

NEW YORK, N.Y.. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 26, 1943

ARMY MAN LAUDS
OUR FIGHT FOR
CONDITIONS
Nov. 2. 1943
Editor:
Dear Brother:
Copies of the LOG are com­
ing really on time and each
succeeding issue seems better
than the last. I was more than
impressed upon reading the
last issue and seeing that our
Union is still in there fighting
despite bureaucratic pressure.
I was disheartened upon hear­
ing of the Sabotage of the se­
curity watch program but
now I see that the shipowners
are paying through the nose
for that.
I had occasion to speak to
the crew of a ship that pulled
in here recently. Half were
NMU and the others were
RMO. The NMU boys were
pretty well disgusted with the
whole set-up and I showed
them a copy of the LOG and
pointed out the many bonuses
our crews are still collecting
even after being paid off. They
said they were going over to
the SIU when they returned
and in doing so, they would
know how they stood on
unionism.
I'm enclosing a $5 donation
and wish I could make it
more. Although I'm taking
War Bonds, I feel that our
Union stands for the same
principles and security.
Steady a^ she goes.
Fraternally yours,
Sgt. Dimitri J. Keigis
Co. A. 562nd Maintenance
APO 503—c/o P. M.
San Francisco, Calif.

WASHINGTON — A twelvepoint program designed to relax
many of the restrictions now
placed upon steamship operators,
the War Shipping Administra­
tion and the unions with respect
to release of information con­
cerning the activities of the war­
time merchant marine, has been
completed and will become effec­
tive immediately, it was learned
this week.
The program is the result of
negotiations between the War
Shipping Administration, the
Navy and the Office of Censor­
ship and represents the first time
since the outbreak of the war
that there has been any relaxa­
tion of the restrictions which
have heretofore been imposed
upon merchant ship operations.
;AS an exeriment, the War
Shipping Administration releas­
ed four press releases, which
were checked by the Office of
War Information and with the
Navy. These stories, the WSA
points out, "unfreeze" the fol­
lowing twelve features, formerly
untold under interpretations of
the code or sometimes told in
part by the Navy about a "cargo
ship";
1. Release by WSA.
2. Name and type of ship.
3. Enemy action or special
event.
4. General location.
5. Approximate date.
6. Names of personneL
7. Addresses of personnel.
.8- Comment by captain or
strictions, it is understood that as
others.
Allied progress is made in both
9. Name of operator or agent. Europe and in the Pacific other
10. Name of yard where built. provisions which now affect se­
11. When launched.
curity:-will be lifted. It is under­
12. Structural reliability.
stood
that work is continuing be­
Although the twelve-point pro­
gram as it now stands is not a tween the three departments
complete relaxation of code re- along these lines.

No. 34

Atlantic Fishermen Call
Strike For Living Wage
Faced with the breakdown of union-governmcnt-industry negotiations for an in­
creased price for their catch, the Atlantic Fishermen's Union, SIU, pulled the pins on
the New York, Boston and New Bedford fleets this week. This strike followed months
of fruitless negotiations with the fish wholesalers and the OPA, and followed the taking
of an official strike vote following a "cooling off" period as demanded by the Smith^Connally Bill.
and the fishermen wpuld be pro­
During the past week Patrick tected. The idea of less profits
McHugh, Secretary-Treasurer of was, of course, like waving a red
the union, had spent several days flag at a bull. The wholesalers
in Washington confering with went beserk.
industry representatives and of­ Most of the fleets in the three
ficials of the OPA, He presented ports were at sea when the strike
figures proving that the fisher­ call was issued and the full ef­
NEW YORK, (ITF) — Twenty men were not able to maintain fect of the tie-up won't be felt for
Greek seamen have been releas­ an American standard of living several days. The mackerel fleet
ed from federal detention at Ellis under present OPA price ceil­ is not effected as the union ne­
gotiated a satisfactory price for
Island in response to representa­ ings.
Many OPA officials resisted this fish some time ago. Neither
tions by the Greek Maritime
Welfare Committee and the the granting of an increase in will the Gloucester fleet be ef­
Greek Maritime Union, it was catch price on the excuse that it fected, as this port's local also
announced this week at the Com­ would increase the cost of living reached a satisfactory agreement
mittee's offices, 18 East 41st St. for the consumer. This would on prices. Those fleets effected
Eleven men will soon ship out only be true if the wholesalers are the Boston fleet with 50 large
aboard Green and other Allied were allowed to pass along to the boats and 800 men; the New
with 75 smaller
merchant vessels while the rest consumer the small increase Bedford fleet
are expected to join the Greek asked by the union. Were the boats and 800 men; and the New
wholesalers forced to cut their York fleet with about 30 boats
Navy.
profits
a bit, both the consumer and 300 men.
The decision of the federal
authorities, according to a com­
mittee spokesman, followed an
investigation of the men's com­
plaints by a-delegation composed
of Mr. Christopher S. Stephano,
chairman of the G.M.W.C., Petros Spiridacos, secretary of the
Greek Maritime Union, and a
representative of the U. S. Im­
migration Department.
The immigration officials, sat­
isfied with the assurance given,
have paroled the men into the
custody of the Recruitment and
Manning Organization of the
War Shipping Administration. It
was suggested in maritime circles
that as a matter of future pro­
cedure, all Greek seamen re­
leased from federal custody be
turned over to the Greek Mar{Continued on Page 4)

Release 20 Greek
Seamen; Open New
Maritime Club

11 SIU Men Prisoners Of War
RUFUS E. STOUGH, Cook
1419% Terpsichore St.
New Orleans, La.

GEORGE A. RIGGINS, Wiper
210 Drumont Place
Norfolk, Virginia

HENRY B. WILSON, AB
422 Grand Ave.
Cumberland, Maine

MANUEL M. LEDESMA,
Messman
Honolulu, T. H.

ALFRED S. KATZ, Utility
2971 Ford St.
Brooklyn, New York

FRED G. STILLWELL,
Pumpman
Gresham, Oregon

WILLIAM E.'LEAVER, FOW
Natasulga, Alabama

CARL G. RYDBERG. OS
Hilo, T. H.
PAUL PETRO, OS
447 Mathews Street
Gary, Indiana
EARL SPEAR, Chief Steward
920 Galier Street
New Orleans, La.
WILLIAM R. SMITH, Oiler
5700 Palisades Ave.
West New York, N. J.

The above brothers have been listed as prisoners of war by the Navy Department.
Most of these men were torpedoed while delivering war goods to Europe, and were sub­
sequently captured and interned by the Nazis. The SIU is now taking steps to send
them packages of food and tobacco, and will do all in its power to see that they receive
such aid as is possible under the circumstances.
However much these brothers will appreciate the smokes we send them, we are cer­
tain that their greatest desire will be that we maintain union conditions so that when the
war ends they will not trade Nazi slavery for American shipowner slavery.
a.'
-1,1

-,

'S
v.

J,

—Justice

�wsEiwc-^raesi

THE

' Page Two

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, Kovember 26. 1943 1

SEAFARERS
Puhlished by the
S-'i

iv-

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
ApUated xvUh tlx Amsricsfi Vsdsrstion -cf Labor .

HARRY LUNDEBERG

------ "Presidenf

110 Mariket Street, Saa Francisco. Calif.

JOHN HAWK

- - - - - - - Secy-Treas.

P. O. Box 25, Station P., New York City

MATTHEW DUSKANfi

- Washhtgton Kep.

424 5 til Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
•www

Directory of Branches
BRANCH

ADDRESS

PHONE

. . BOwling Green 9-3437
• 2 Slone St.
..Liberty 405 7
..330 Atlantic Ave
BOSTON (10)
...Calvert 4539
,.14 North Cay St
BALTIMORE (2)
...Lombard
7651
. .6 North 6th St
PHILADELPHIA
.".Norfolk 4-1083
..25 Commercial PI
NORFOLK...
..Canal 3336
NEW ORLEANS (16) ..309 Chartres St
..Savannah 3-1728"
..218 East Bay St
SAVANNAH
..Tampa
MM-1323
TAMPA........a..•*. ..423 East Piatt St
...Dial
2-1392
..55
So.
Conception.
St...
MOBILE
..Puerto cle Tierra
..45 Ponce de Leon
PUERTO RICO
..Galveston 2-8043
..219 20th Street
GALVESTON
FT. LAUDERDALE.... . .2021 S. Federal Highway. ..Ft. Lauderdale 1601
NEW YORK (4)

PUBLICATION OFFICE:
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STMET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8346
267

I
ft"

French Seamen's Union Is
Reorganized; Growing At
Phenominal Rate Of Speed
V-762
NEW YORK, (ITF)--The .story gether and decided to organize
of. .the reconstruction of the once more, the union they had
" STench ' Sieainen's Union, is the all once been members of. At
story of a fight against fascism the first meeting of the union
and evidence of the desire of held in New Yoik, nearly 350
French merchant seamen all over French seamen attended. This
the world to reconstruct democ­ represented an almost 100% at­
racy in their native land.
tendance with the exception of
ONE FOR THE BOOK
THOSE "STABS IN !
No sooner had CJeneral Charles those who had to remain on
deGaulle escaped from France duty aboard their ships. Enthu-.
ballots received
THE BACK'*
President Roosevelt has ap­
to England than the French mer­ siasm ran high and- once more L^om train, engine and yard ser- pointed a committee of five to
chant ships followed his lead. these men could look to the fu- vice" workers by the Transporta- find oiit about the cost of living. Dispatches received in only
Soon after their arrival in Eng­ ture with hope. Other, ships fol-Brotherhoods are running He doesn't need'a conimittee. He one (lay this month told of the
land, the crews of these ships lowed and their crews too, joined ..ai^^st 100 per cent" in favor of can jget the dope the way the return of 24,000 striking' aircr^
makers in Britain and the settle­
•got together to form on foreign the union.
^ walkout, President D. B. Rob- Labor Herald gets it—namely,
ment
of two coaL strikes involv-,
soil, the trade union they had But the story in England and ertson of the Locomotive Fire- from the housewives.
ing
6,000
men, with a strike (jf
seen made illegal at home. From America, is not the only one. men and Enginemen revealed on
He, himself, could go to the Scotch shipbuilders looming. We
June, 1940 until the liberation of Two hundred seamen in Algiers Wednesday.
OPA. There; he will learn that
North Africa by allied armies, organized in April the Algerian The early returns are mainly subsidies were given to reduce don't hear so much nowadays
about how British workers stanii
these were the only French sea­ Seamen's Union. By May their
from roads near the headquarters the cost of butter by two and for any old thing "to win thb
men "delivering the goods." Many number had risen to over five
of several of the Brotherhoods one-half cents per pound. Im­ war," with the war right in their,
others, unable to escape, worked hundred. In June their example
and are being tabulated as they mediately there was little or no front yard.
at home in the underground was followed by the seamen in
come in. If the present rate of butter. Announcement was made
movement and many were forced Oran with another two hundred
That old gag has died out, anfl
"yes" votes continues, a , record that there would be plenty of
to work for the Vichy Govern­ members. News has now reached
our
people are beginning to sus­
majority for a strike \yill he roll­ butter for fall and .winter be­
ment.
pect
that maybe the Briffsib;
the office of the French Seamen's ed up, Robertson predicted.
cause the tubs of the armed
At the time North Africa was Union in New York that the va­
workers
know a few things
forces were full to the overflow­
freed and the larger part of the rious local unions of seamen in "The response from these em­ ing. Butler got scarcer and about war from close acquaint­
ployes demonstrates beyond a
French merchant fleet joined the North Africa have joined to­
doubt
how bitterly the men feel scarcer. Now the OPA announces ance, That the winning of' this,
fleets of all the United Nations, gether and that they are in close
the price of butter is to be ad­ or any other war, can be helped
the men in these ships had no touch with the union in England, over the way they have been vanced six cents per pound.
or speeded by submission to in­
legal union and almost no or­ which is affiliated to the Inter­ treated," Robertson declared.
The President has appointed a dustrial tyranny has never been
ganization. Trade unions had national Transport Workers' Fed- The Firemen and Enginemen's
committee to inquire into all proved. It's just assumed' by
been prohibited by Vichy, both jeration. Thus, the French sea- chief also made it clear the
these details and thousands loud-talking Babbits who are
in France and in North Africa; "men have once more been unions are "definitely not inter­
ested" an an offer of Economic more. Safe bet! The committee sitting this war out, as they sat
Early in the Spring of 1943, sev­
will bring in a report that every­ the last one out^—and grabbing
eral of these ships came in to brought together in the same Stabilizer Fred M. Vinson to
and dandy and big profits for sitting.
New York harbor for repairs, re­ union, regardless of the type of "raise the ante" slightly on the thing is fine
» » »
fitting and arming. In almost no .ship' they sail, or the department miserly 4-cent increase awarded working people are a worthless Over here "Wb are still told
by an Emergency Board to the lot for wanting butter on- their
time these seamen had gotten to- in which they work.
workers represented by the five bread. That has been the sys­ that this or that strike maj' cause
tem so far. We expect no imme- the death of an American soldier.
Brotherhoods.
But there is not and never was,
'diaite
change.
As reported in another story on
ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
one
proved casualty in the Amer­
this page, Vinson, in announcing
—Lal»r Herald
ican Army caused by any lack
WEEK OF NOVEMBER 8th TO 13th
a sliding, scale of increases rec:
of arms or ammunition becauM
ommended by the board for the
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL
"We're interested in fairness, of an industrial stoppage.
"non-operating" workers, said he
was willing to apply the same not in handouts," Robertson" as­ —United Mine Workers Journal
SHIPPED
357
170
281
808
formula to the "operating" group. serted. "Our men want decent
That would mean 5 to 6 ceiits an itreatment, not stuff such as that.
REGISTERED
265
217
240
722
Kdep In Touch With '
hour, instead of 4 cents for some They're more angry and resent­
ful than they have been in years."
of the operating employes.
Draft Board ].

Americah workers have built the greatest navy in the world.

Rail Workers Are J-hom, JhsL o&amp;Aoi PMAJL —
Voting Wdkotrt

f
ll:

�;;fW-:

Friday, November 26, 1943

THE

SEAFARERS

- i-

LOG

Page Three i

r,wNEW SOCtAU SECUR1TY'TAX*6IVES YOU:

seA/ff/rs; lot/eex PAYpmoos.

WHAT'S DOnifG

INCREASED INCOME OR SALES TAX 6IVES YOU:
PO /MPP0y£Af£P7S:8£/Y££/7SP£AfA/M.
SMALL: PAY P£P/00 Sf/opn •

Around the Porte
MOBILE

1

Weil brothers, I-have just had
the pleasure of giving a gander
to the greatest piece of exagger­
ation that was ever placed on
'paper with printer's ink. And be­
lieve me brothers, I have seen
sojme • awful misconstruance of
the facts by this element. The
title of this mastcl'picce is, "The
NMU, What. It. Is And What It
Does." This book is suppose to
be put up by the educational
committee of the National Mari­
time Union and published by one
Leo Huberman.
.Now the average youngster
that just recently came into the
n;aritime industry knows little or
nothing about this set-up. He
•w'puld read this book and natur­
ally assume that the NMU was
really responsible for the wages
and working conditions that the
seamen are enjoying on the
ships today.
-Now for the average layman
that don't know the score, I will
try to define this suppose-to-be
labor organization known as the
NMU. We will take it in the or­
der of the title. First, this NMU
is only one chapter of a large
drama which consumed a - very
long time for a number of play­
wrights to turn out. They com­
pleted it in 1917 and titled it
Bolshevism and later on they
titled it Communism. The heads
of the playwrights were changed
from time to time, the head of
them now is one, Joe Stalin.
• Then it became the problem of
•their salesmen to sell-this drania
to the poor working stiffs of the
world. The program was to sell
this - play to three industries,
mainly, the transportation indus­
try, the communication industry
and the publication industry.
Their conception was if they
could accomplish this feat they
would have the world by the tail
on a down hill drag. They tried
to sell their slush for years under
the guise of the Maritime Work­
ers Industrial Union, but could
not get in the groove with this
moniker. So, at the Moscow
convention in 1935 the commis­
sars decided to take anothep
tack, so they came out with a
new program. This was subse­
quent to the collective bargain­
ing election on the Pacific Coast
in 1934 to determine who would
be the collective agency to bar­
gain for workers. Then the In­
ternational Longshoreman's As­
sociation and The International
Seamen's Union was declared the
bargaining agents by the work­
ers.
The program was to instruct
all fellow-travelers and commie
stooge's to join these two organi­
zations and disrupt the organiza­
tions and discredit the officials
until they could take control of
these organizations.
Around about this time was a
bird by the name of Joe Curran
who was working in the Grace
Line shore gang in New YoTk for
$.50 an hour when the scale
of pay for painters in New York
at that time was $1.00 an hour.
]^e joined the Eastern &amp; Gulf
Sailors Association of the Inter­
national Seamen Union. Reason

per. It seems to me that quite a
number of our members are not
taking their union to heart as
they once did, maybe it is due
to the war or the swift pace that
we are now travelling.
The USS and the Conunies
opened up the new place here on
the 31st of October and from
what I can read in the papers
they had quite a blowout. Bro.
Swanson of the NMU was one of
the main speakers, and Senator
Pepper, who is well known for
his anti-labor activities in this
state. Oh, by the way, Swanson
has taken to the Cement Block
(One of the new cement ships
that are being built here) as
Boatswain. It seems that the
man with the long whiskers gave
him a notice to go to sea or be
drafted.
A West Coast ship was in the
other day from a six month trip
and they paid off without many
beefs and continued their way
back to the coast with first class
transportation. The ship was
turned over to the Navy and be­
lieve me they, got a nice looking
ship.
Quite a few of the Tampa boys
are back from a long trip and
TAMPA
they seem to be very happy to
From the looks of the other get back to the Palmettos and
branche.s' minutes the voting has orange groves where they can
not begun so very strong. I sup­ spread the bull without any inpose that in the near future teruption from the Yanks.
Shipping here is very slow but
when the convoys come in things
will pick up some. We have we do a little dues business, now
quite a few members in this and then. Wonder how 'Bro.
branch and I have to raise hell to Army is making out with the
get a balloting committee to Flagship of the Waterman Fleet,
serve. After the voting is over Part Orleans. I want him to take
you will hear all kinds of hell care of that ship as she is the
raised because some so-and-so pride and, joy of the Tampa
Branch (Sometimes).
got in office.
Well, if they would take as From all the information, the
much interest in their voting as Bull Line is going to take one of
they do in condemning the offi­ the floating brick bats that is
cials that are now in office and coming out of the yard in the
the new ones that will be install­ near future. That's all for this
ed, probably we would have a week.
union that would be a super-duD. L. PARKER, Agent

was that The International Sea­
men Union had a contract with
Grace Line. He joined the Union
in May 1935 and never paid any
more dues until September. He
got himself in bad standing im­
mediately, which is bad and very
rotten unionism in anyone's
uniori. Now this was the man
that they singled out to lead this
herd. You can draw your own
conclusion.
They continued on their pro­
gram until some time in 1937
when this element was cited for
using the name of the Interna­
tional Seamen Union to collect
the union's funds on the union
books. Then overnight the Na­
tional Maritime Union was born.
Joe Curran placed head of it and
that's what the NMU is. Now
any old timer is well acquainted
with these facts but the new
comers to the industry are not
and this is for their benefit.
Later on we will see if we can
define what the NMU does, and
until that time brothers, try to
keep her in the channel.
OLDEN BANKS, Agent

Th^ 99 Yeair Club
Oh, come with me to the NMU
And see. Club 99,
It's there you'll meet the oidtimers
With strike cards sublime.
The men who built the NMtX
Shall rrieet you at the door,^
Yes, you shall meet the real men
And you shall learn the score.
Yes, a famous Club of the NMU
Is that called 99,
No Communist faker in the lot
So do not waste your time.
No agents of Joseph Stalin there
No bums froni Browder's knee.
No draft dodging Commie windbags
But men who sail the sea.
How do you join Club 99?
Well, here is what you do.
While on an NMU madhouse
Just praise the SIU,
Or call Joe Curran a liar
Or the Communist line a fake
Then you're a candidate for the Club
A brother on the make.
Just say "to hell with Stalin"
And the door is opened wide
For the Commie rats ride every ship
And o'er your thoughts preside.
Or wonder where, your cash has gone
The millions of the past
Of Murray Stein and the Party bums
And you are there at last.
—Top an' Lift.

••'SI

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IF PVAiOi ALLOW.. "

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^|

This chart shows unemployment benefits for a married man
who earns $40 a week in a factory and supports a family of
four. Left: Benefits under Wagner-Murray-Dingell Bill. Right:
If sales or income tax is imposed instead. The worker will
receive only those benefits now in effect under state laws.
(AFL Labor's Monthly Survey chart via Federated Pictures)

ILGWU Would Scrap
NEW AGREEMENTS
Little Steel Policy
CONCLUDED
Scrapping of the "arbitrary
and rigid Little Steel formula to
make room for a more flexible
wage policy" to meet the needs
of workers and consumers was
demanded by the general execu­
tive board of the International
Ladies Garment Workers Union
in a resolution made public yes­
terday by David Dubinsky, pre.sident of the union.
"The only real effect of the
Little Steel formula to date has
been the practical freezing of
wages," the resolution declared.
"Stabilization of living costs, as
every consumer knows, is largely
wishful thinking, while the true
inflationary forces, the industrial
combines which control living
necessities, are having a field
day.
"We demand that the arbitrary
and rigid Little Steel formula be
scrapped to make room for a
more flexible wage policy

The New York office of the In­
ternational Transport Workers
Federation reports the conclus­
ion, in London, of new and more
favorable agreements for the
members of the National Union
of British Seamen. The new pact
provides a standard overtime
rate for all foreign-going ships
Df two shillings, three pence fo?
carpenters, bosuns and donkeymen, two shillings for other se­
nior ratings and one shilling for
seamen with junior ratings. The
overtime is to apply to all ves­
sels and crew members in all de­
partments.
The steward department per­
sonnel also have won an improv­
ed working schedule w h i c H
shortens their hours and provid­
es them with more consecutive
time off. Compensation for loss
of effects has been almost doubl­
ed for British seamen by the new
agreement which now sets the
allowance at twenty-five pounds.

SIU And Tanker Members
On West Coast
Central Registeringr and Dispatching Office
Open in SUP Headquarters at San Francisco
For SIU Members and T,C/s in
Deck, Engine and Steward Departments
Increased shipping on West Coast by SIU members
has made it necessary to open a separate and complete
business ofRce to be devoted solely to registering and car­
ing for the needs of SIU members in all departments.
.^1 SIU members in San Francisco are required to im­
mediately register in SIU office at 59 Clay St. SIU members
in SUP Branches on the West Coast are to register in the
respective SUP Office and receive an SIU shipping card.
SIU shipping cards will have preference on SIU ships and
will be recognized by all SUP Dispatchers. SIU Deck mem­
bers will have second preference when SUP members are
available.

For Further Information:
Call your union offices and tanker organizers at the
addresses listed below. You will always finds somebody at
these numbers exceptmg at night.
SEATTLE, WASH.—86 Seneca St.—Phone Elliott 6752.
—^E. Coester or Johnson.
PORTLAND, OREGON—111 West Burnside St.—Phone
Beacon 4336—John Massey or C. Atkins.
RICHMOND, CALIFORNIA—257 Fifth St.—Phone Rich­
mond 4021—^Louie Glebe or Banks.
VANCOUVER, B. C.—340 B. Gamble St.—Phone Pacific
7824—^Hugh Murphy.
WILMINGTON, California — 440 Avalon Blvd. —Phone
4449.
NEW YORK CITY — 105 Broad St. — Phone BOwling
Green 9-9530—Morris Weisberger.
SAN FRANCISCO—59 Clay St.—Phone Exbrook 8229—
Phil Conley.

•".Ss|
••ti

�®f®SSraBS!6«aq

Page Four

CP

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, November 26, 1943

AFL WINS VITAL TEST CASES
Relea^ 20 Greek
Seamen; Open New
Maritime Club

BASAAR

{Continued from Page 1)
iners Club in New. York, •a joint
enterprise of the U. S. and Greek
governments. The club home, it
was explained, offers ample
housing facilities and cai-e for the
men imtil their departure from
the United States.

Knocks Out Closed Shop
Anti-Labor Is Upheld
Act In Fla. By WLB

WASHINGTON — The WLB
Foes of -labor who have been
ti-ying to destroy unions through has unanimously ordered that a
court action and legislation, state union shop clause be retained id
by state, suffered one of their a contract between the Webe?
most important reversals this Showcase and Fixture Co. of Los
week at the hands of the Florida Angeles and four AFL building
trades unions.
Supreme Court.
That tribunal threw out a suit The company had claimed that
Official opening of the Greek
started
by Attorney General Tom the union shop clause and the
Mariners Club, located at West
Watson
to outlaw, closed shop contract were terminated when
59th St., took place on Monday,
union agreements with the Tam­ the union asked for a reopening
November 15, 6:30 P.M. The
pa Shipbuilding Company and of the contract under a provision
Greek Ambassador Simeon Diaother plants in the Everglade giving either party the right to
mantopoulos, Archibishop Athenserve notice of a desire to "mo­
State.
agoras. Mayor La Guardia, Mr.
With the support of reaction­ dify, amend or terminate it."
Marshall E. Dimock, assistant
ary newspapers, Watson has been The WLB found that, on the
deputy administrator of the
crusading against unions for the contrary, the record showed that
WSA, attended the dedication
past few years and climaxed his the union's intent was not to ter­
ceremonies.
campaign by litigating to break minate the contract, but to mo­
The club has housing, rest and
the A. F. of L. contract with dify and amend it. The Board
restaurant facilities for about 80
Tampa Shipbuilding. He won therefore ordered employees who
seamen and is managed by a
out in a lower state court, but were hired during the period in
board of directors composed of
met his "Waterloo" in the high which the company claimed that
American and Greek shipping
t was not bound by the union
court.
officials, representatives of the
shop clauses, to become members
Greek-American community, the
DEFENDS AGREEMENT
of the union in good standing
shipowners and the Greek Mari­
"Stop it, Helen, the OPA just froze you at 97 cents."
All of Watson's arguments within two weeks or seek jobs
time Union. "The new club en­
against closed shop agreements elsewhere.
joys the wholehearted support of y-/S9-'/a
Drmpn for OtPce of War Information
were demolished in the opinion. Wayne L. Morse, public mem­
the American and Greek author­
Such
agreements, the tribunal ber, in an opinion outlining the
SHIP
NAMED
ities and all other interested
held,
are
neither contrary to pub­ reasons for the WLB's action,
FOR HUDDELL
groups," Mr. Taylor said. "We
lic
policy
nor in violation of the said that the Board was aware
look forward to an era of fruitful
state
constitution.
They are sus­ that the company had hired d
The logging of the Steward's WASHINGTON — Upon the
activities. These activities, I am
tained
by
such
Federal
laws as arge number of employees re­
sure, will not only be of benefit Department of the S.S. Daniel suggestion of William Green,
the
Norris-La
Guardia
Act,
Sher­ cently who did not become union
President
of
AFL,
the
name
of
to our seamen but also strength­ Willard has been reversed by the
man
Anti-Trust
Act
and
the members, but this did not justify
Arthur
M.
Huddell,
one-time
en the bonds between the Ameri­ Commissioner after a lengthy
the Board's setting aside a union
Wagner
Act,
the
court
pointed
president
of
the
International
trial. The men involved can col­
can and Greek peoples."
shop
clause which it found had
out.
Union
of
Operating
Engineers,
is
lect their extra meal money and
never
expired.
log refund from Calmar Line to be given to a Liberty ship
"Furlhermore, we find no
"It is unfortunate that the com­
now under construction.
Blddle Would Tighten Office.
proof that compliance with
pany has hired such a largie •
Recognized
as
a
leader
of
the
Law Against Stowaways Extra meal money on S.S. Mel­ labor movement in the early part the contract has resulted in number of non-union employees
a retardation of the war efn direct violation of its contrac­
Attorney General Francis Bid- ville is now payable at the Pier of the century, Huddell, who was ford," the court said in punc­
tual
obligations to the union,"
born
at
Danvers,
Mass.,
in
1869,
25
office
of
the
Eastern
S.S.
Co.
die has requested Congress to
turing another claim of Wat­
Morse
said. "The fact that the
served
as
president
of
the
Boston
The
men
involved
are:
strengthen existing laws against
son.
company
may lose their services
Central
Labor
Union
and
organ­
G.
Lynch,
Cook
ship stowaways by rewording
is
unfortunate
but not nearly as
izer for the International Union "The parties may negotiate
W. Williams, Cook
the Act of June 11, 1940, to make
unfortunate
as
the situation
of
Operating
Engineers,
Commis­
any
contracts
not
contrary
to
law
G. Ellis, Utility
it clear that anyone who stows
would
be
if
the
company were
sioner
of
Old
Age
Pensions
of
or
good
morals.
Management
is
Barnes, Messman
away on certain merchant ves­
allowed
to
defeat
the legitimate
Massachusetts,
Civil
Service
free
to
hire
only
union
men
if
it
Yancey, Messman
sels has committed a criminal
»
St
rights
of
the
union
in the man­
Commissioner
from
1918
to
1922,
chooses.
Likewise,
labor
is
free
offense, whether or not he is ap­
ner
it
has
attempted
to in this
president
of
the
Boston
Building
to
work
only
with
union
men
if
Following
brothers
have
over­
prehended before disembarking.
case ..."
and Construction Trades Council, it chooses."
time coming from Bull Line:
The Attorney General's recom­ Roland Stradling
138 hrs. 1910, and business agent for the
The Board urged union officials
BLOW FOR LABOR-HATERS
mendation, which was contained James Smalls
to grant every reasonable con-*
100 hrs. Building and Construction Trades
in a letter sent to the Speaker of Robert Stackhouse
100 hrs. Council of Boston from 1911 to
Joseph A. Padway, A. F. of L. cession to provide those em­
the Kouse of Representatives, a Pete Sudol
85 hrs. 1918. He became General Presi­ general counsel, who argued the ployees who join the union with­
few days ago, pointed out that John Pritchard
35 hrs. dent of the Operating Engineers case for the unions in the court, in the two-week period ample
existing law assumes that a Albert Myers
20 hrs. in 1921 and served in that cap­ declared the decision strikes a time to pay the union's initiation
stowaway will be apprehended
St
*
St
acity until his death in 1931.
powerful blow against anti-labor fee. Dean Morse said. Dues for'
before leaving the ship, but The following crew members
such employees will start from
forces throughout the nation.
leaves some doubts as to the of the S.S. William Pepper have
Marine
Insurance
Cut
It will help, he said, in defeat­ the time of the Board's order.
status of anyone who stows overtime coming from Calmar
ing an amendment to the Florida The unions in the case are lo­
away successfully and is not dis­ Line, 39 Broadway, New York
WASHINGTON—• Reduced for state constitution barring closed cals of the Sheet Metal Workers'
covered until after he has left City:
the second time in little more shops, which will be voted upon International Association, Re­
the ship.
Harry Justice
than 3 months, the rate for Gov­ in a referendum next fall. The frigeration Fitters, Welders and
Herbert
Watson
ernment
war risk insurance on amendment was submitted by Apprentices, Brotherhood of
Mr. Biddle proposed that Con­
Painters, Decorators and PaperJoseph
Sleczkowski
officers
and
seamen in the Mer­ the last state legislature.
gress clear up the matter by
hangers
of America, and the
George
Cuddy
Padway added that "this rul­
chant Marine is now $2, the War
striking out a clause that anyone
United
Brotherhood
of Carpen­
William
Harden
ing
gives
us
new
ammunition
in
who has illegally secreted him­
Shipping A d m i nistration an­
ters
and
Joiners
of
America.
P.
Yurick
our
battle
to
knock
out
laws
in
self aboard a United States ship
nounces. Until July 15 the pre­
* « •
other states which have been The Weber Company, which
shall be considered guilty of an
mium
rate per $1000 of insurance designed to wreck unions by re­ formerly produced fixtures, now
The
following
crew
members
offense if he is "found * *
at
or before the time of arrival of of the S.S. Steelore have over­ in addition to the $5,000 insur­ stricting or prohibiting closed manufactures airplane wings and
employes more than 1,200 peo­
such ves-sel." With this deletion time and extra meal money due: ance furnished by the Govern­ shop agreements."
Wilton Shaw
ple, .twice as many as before the
it would be possible for the At­
ment, was $7.50 per month. On
Gerald Usher
war.
torney General's office to pro­
that date it was cut to $4. The
^
Jordan
Smith
ceed against any stowaway on
second reduction is in line with
Wilbert Williams
an American ship discovered
Injurin
Devonish
making life insurance against
within the jurisdiction of the
* • •
war risks and certain specified
United States.
CREW S. S.
Extra meals money is payable marine perils more easily avail­ Brother Frank Donnally is laid
RICHARD RUSH
$15.00
The communication from Mr. to entire Steward Department of
up in Ellis Island Hospital in
N.
WERNERSON
5.00
able
to
merchant
ship
crews
and
Biddle has been turned over to S.S. Kenmar. Collect Calmar
New York. He would like to re­
4.00
V the House Committee on Mer­ Line. 39 Broadway, New York reflects diminished peril of Axis ceive a visit from any of his old C. GORING
chant Marine and Fisheries.
City.
shipmates. He is in Ward 25.
E. MAULE
2.00
attacks at sea.

MONEY DUE

r

'iA-Sonals

Honor Roll

•
•

y .tsii

^.

I'

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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
CENSORS EASE RESTRICTION ON NEWS&#13;
ARMY MAN LAUDS OUR FIGHT FOR CONDITIONS&#13;
ATLANTIC FISHERMEN CALL STRIKE FOR LIVING WAGE&#13;
RELEASE 20 GREEK SEAMEN; OPEN MARITIME CLUB&#13;
11 SIU MEN PRISONERS OF WAR&#13;
FRENCH SEAMEN'S UNION IS REORGANIZED; GROWING AND PHENOMINAL RATE OF SPEED&#13;
RAIL WORKERS ARE VOTING WALKOUT&#13;
ONE FOR THE BOOK&#13;
THOSE "STARS IN THE BACK"&#13;
ILGWU WOULD SCRAP LITTLE STEEL POLICY&#13;
NEW AGREEMENTS CONCLUDED&#13;
THE 99 YEAR CLUB&#13;
SIU AND TANKER MEMBERS ON WEST COAST&#13;
KNOCKS OUT ANTI-LABOR ACT IN FLA.&#13;
CLOSED SHOP IS UPHELD BY WLB&#13;
SHIP NAMED FOR HUDDELL&#13;
BIDDLE WOULD TIGHTEN LAW AGAINST STOWAWAYS&#13;
MARINE INSURANCE CUT</text>
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                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
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                    <text>OFFICIAL OEGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMEETCA
Vol. V.
t,-/

i•

NEW YORK. N.Y., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1943

No. 34

Macauley Whips Up Strike
Scare In Smearing SlU-SUP
VSS Is Picketed By
Angry Merchantmen

Captain Edward Macauley called reporters into his office early this week and
issued hysterical charges that the SIU-SUP was planning to strike and announced that
the WSA was laying plans to use the Army, the Navy and the RMO trainees to break
the strike. This deliberate smear of the SIU-SUP was immediately given a big play by
the nation's press—all the major papers in New York devoting scare headlines to the
The United Seamen's Service, Moore took over.
^story.
•
that super-dooper, stream-lined, "The very fact that I was a
This was, of course, just as bureau with the use of the RMO

guilt-edged charity outfit, was
picketed this week in New York
- by a group of seamen who were
fed up with the anti-union moves
of this reformer outfit. Picket
lines appeared on Monday eve­
ning before the Andrew Furuseth
Glub and on Tuesday-before the
USS headquarters at 39 Broad­
way. The signs carried by the
pickets centered their attacks
upon Mr. James Moore, a unionbaiting character who is now
New York Port Director for the
USS.
The immediate cause of the
picket line was the firing
by
Moore of Jerry McGlade, a seaxnen employed at the Andrew
Furuseth Club. Ever since
Moore has been in charge of the
club he has been house-cleaning
the organization in an effort to
eliminate all those who fail to
lick his boots or who show any
real sympathy for the seamen
and their problems. McGlade is
a disabled seaman, having lost
an arm and a leg abroad, and
was employed at the club before

seaman seemed to iritate Moore,"
McGlade said, "and I could see
that he was determined to ease
me out and put in some boys'
club reformer."

Mooi-e's way of easing McGlade
out of his job was to demand
that he run for the cops each
time one of the boys in the bar
got gassed up a bit. McGlade
naturally objected to calling the
cops just because the boys had
heaved a few too many—and he
was fired.
Mr. Marshall Dimock's motherin-law also came in for some
blasting on the picket cards. She
is the one who demanded that a
seaman be arrested when he ab­
sent-mindedly walked off with
her fountain pen a few weeks
ago. This was reported in Dushane's column week before last.
The picket signs labeled
Moore a "Little Ceasar" and de­
manded that the "USS Be Staff­
ed With Seamen—Not With Di­
mock's Relatives."

New 'Luxury'
Life Rafts
Tested

OAKLAND, Calif., Nov. 29 —
The latest "luxury" raft which
will carry torpedoed soldiers and
seamen away from their trans­
ports and merchant vessels in en­
emy-infested waters is designed
to help meet the recreational
needs of the survivors as well as
to make life easier for any seri­
ously wounded men aboard.
A Bible, a deck of playing
cards, a carton of cigarettes and
two canvas berth beds, on which
men in a critical condition may
lie in comparative comfort, are
standard equipment on every
raft. And when the new arcwelded steel life-saving appar­
atus underwent its final inspec­
tion test at the L. • A. Young
Spring and Wire Corporation's
plant in Oakland, a stove and
(CotiUntud on Page 4)

if

Macauley planned. His deliber­
ate slander' against our union
was couched in language design­
ed to make it appear that the
union was sabotaging the war
effort, thus assuring that the em­
ployer press would give it a big
play.
Actually no strike threat had
been made by the union. What
raised Macauley's ire was Harry
Lundeberg's letter of protest
against the Stalinist inspired
move to eliminate many oldtime seamen from their trade by
establishing rigid physical re­
quirements. Macauley, with a
long record of supporting the
Stalinists in maritime, took the
Lundeberg letter as a personal
affront and rushed tO"'"the press
with his hysterical threats.
What is significant in Macaul­
ey's performance is not so much
that his snottyness is due to the
weakness of his arguments, but
that for the first time the vmions
are threatened by a government

The Saga Of
Alcoa Scout
Is Told
The heroic story of the S.S.
Alcoa Scout and its SIU crew
was released this week, almost a
year to the day after it occured.
It is a story of a small, slow ship
of World War I vintage, facing
one of the most vicious North
Atlantic storms in recent year's,
and because of the seamanship
of the crew, coming through with
flying colors.
The Alcoa Scout steamed into
an east coast port at the end of
her tussle with the elements last
winter with only six inches of
free-board aft and four feet for­
ward. Examination of the ship
revealed that she was twisted
completely out of alignment, the
holds carried a large quantity of
water, all lifeboats had been
swept away, one anchor was gone
and several ventilators were se­
verely battered.
The report of the master, Capt.
Charles B. Dunn, said that enemy
action could not have hurt his
ship any more than the wild,
winter storms he had encounter­
ed in carrying vital supplies to
remote. northern air bases estab­
lished by the Army.

v'-v

.. . .

trainees as strike-breakers. The
SIU-SUP has predicted from the
very beginning that the WSA
would attempt to use the thous­
ands of government trained kids
as finks once the war ended and
the shipowners and the unions
come to grips. Now, even before
the war ends, the WSA whips up
a fake strike scare just to give it
an excuse to threaten the unions
with its trainees.
Macauley told reporters that
the government has 28,000 sea­
men available to break strikes.
That's a lot of bunk. What he
didn't tell the reporters is that
the great majority of the train­
ees have joined the various mari­
time unions and are not' the do­
cile finks he considers them, and
that the men he proposes to man
the ships with have had no ac­
tual sea experience and are prac­
tically aU unrated men. When
the real test of strength comes
between the. unions and the ship­
owners (and their controlled
government boards), we can
promise Mr. Macauley that the
great majority of his trainees
will wind up on the side of the
unions. He shouldn't be too
cocky about how many strike­
breakers he can throw into the
waterfront.
So much for Macauley's diver­
sionary tactic—now for the real
issues between us.
This move to eliminate the old
timers from the industry arises
from a need on the part of both
the Stalinists and the shipowners
to pick off the old and tested
militants in the unions. Both the
Stalinists and the shipowners
find themselves in irreconcilable
opposition to the old-timers and
hope to supplant them with the
more tractable kids now coming
out of the government schools.
They have seized upon the
scheme of physical examinations
as the easiest and cleanest meth­
od of eliminating the militant
union men.
This plan was approved by Joe
Curran last month. It was im­
mediately picked up by the fel­
low travelers in the WSA and a
directive order was drawn which
would become operative on De­
cember 1, 1943.
Immediately a wave of pro­
test swept the waterfront, not
only in the SIU-SUP, but within
the NMU itself. It was to coun­
ter this protest that Macauley
and the fellow travelers charged
{Continued on Page 4)

�THE

Page Two

'1 r

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. December 3. 1943 ^
I4

SEAFARERS LOG

•hf

i-'S

Pulrlished by the

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf IMstrict

III

The NY Times And
Crocodile Tears

|4iC:

• BV MATT-HEW DMSMAME-*

Several months ago I reported the present Wai- Shipping Ad­ ficer on appeal will be in wrii&lt;
that the War Shipping Adminis­ ministration, and like the present
ing and will contain his find*
tration was working on a plan WSA, during world war No.
ings and conclusions. The de-*
HARRY LUNDEBERG ------ "President
whereby all rherchant seamen cooperated with and supplement­
cision of the District C.G. of­
110 Maricct Street, San Francisco, Calif.
would be required to take a med- ed the work of the ISU. Then in ficer on appeal shall be final
cal examination. Mr. Marshall E. 1921 the Shipping Board used
and shall be binding on tha
JOHN HAWK
------- Secy-Treas,
Dimock, Assistant Deputy Direc- taxpayers' money to break the
parties for all purposes.
P. O. Box 25, Station P., New York Gty
;or for Recruitment and Man­ b a etc s of organized seamen
(c) A iranscript ofdhe record
ning, has sent me a communica­ -through the infamous lockout,
MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Rep.
before the hearidg officer shall
tion advising me that 4he WSA and inagurated their open shop
424 5tli Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
be made available to any per­
has proposed a general order on program, and made seamen flie
*!
W
W!
son whose license or certificala
this matter. The RMO will hold chattels of the shipowners until
is revoked or suspended for
Directory of Branches
a meeting to discuss the order on 1943, when the Pacific Coast
the purpose of making an ap­
November 30th.
Maritime Unions broke their
peal
pursuant to fhe provision^
PHONE
ADDRESS
BRANCH
The WSA proposed order ap­ chains of bondage.
of this section.
NEW YORK (4)
2 Stono St
BOwKng Green 9-3437
plies to all ships owned by or My opinion is that Mr. Dimock
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
(d) Any person whose li­
under bareboat charter to the is preparing to line himself up
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Cay St..
Calvert 4539
cense
or certificate is revoked
PHILADELPHIA
...6 North 6th SL
Lombard 765 I
WSA, and states this -medical ex­ and become the Captain Peter­
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
or suspended and who intends
NEW ORLEANS (16) ..309 Chartrea St
^nal 3336
amination must be taken to son of the 1921 era. We have all
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St
Savannah 3-1728
to appeal from the decision of
safeguard the health of seagoing read Jack London's definition of
TAMPA
423 East Piatt St..
revocation or suspension may
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St
Dial 2-1392
personnel
and
to
avoid
delays
a scab. To my knowledge no one
PUERTO RICO
45 Ponce de Leon
.Puerto de Tierra
file
with the heuing officer a
which are caused by illness of has defined a scab herder, in all
GALVESTON
219 20th Street...
^Iveston 2-8043
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway. .. Ft. Lauderdale 160 1
request
for a temporary lieensa
crew members while vessels are probability the English language
or
certificate
valid during iha
on voyage. Dimock certainly does not contain the words that
pendency
of
the
appeal. Sudt
PUBLICATION OFFICE:
knows how to line up the angles would adequately define such
temporary
license
or certificate
when he wants to put something subject matters.
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
shall
contain
such
terms SBA
across.
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8345
conditions
as
the
issuing
officer
U.S.
COAST
GUARD:
The standards for medical ex­
~
Z67
may
prescribe
and
shall
con­
aminations shall be approved by Several cases are coming in!
tain
a
definite
expiration
date
regarding
suspension
and
revo-,
the U.S. Public Health Service
fixed
by
the
issuing
officer
cation
of
seamen's
certificates.
upon the recommendation of the
which date, however, may be
Medical Director of the WSA. Latest Coast Guard order is:
extended
from lime to time by
Temporary
wartime
rules
gov­
Standards will be set by the
the
issuing
officer."
erning
investigations
of
accidents
WSA.
I am of the opinion that the
All general agents of the WSA and casualties, as amended
who have doctors on their staff through October 22, 1943 — Title membership should fully ao-,
may continue examining seamen 46 Shipping — Chapiex II Coast quaint themselves with the C.G.
as in the past. Those who have Guard: Inspection and Naviga­ orders on revocation and suspen­
The New York Times has suddenly developed a crying no doctors, arrangements will be tion—Part 133-"A" Marine In­ sions of certificates. Particularly
jag over the plight of some fifteen million "white collar" made to provide medical exaip-; vestigation Board Rules" — Ad­ the above section, as there may
workers who, because they are not organized, have failed to inations by doctors desiginated vise all agents to go to the near­ he some cases wherein a menir
Obtain wage increases permitted under the "Little Steel by the medical director of the est C.G. office and get copies so her may he ordered to appear
WSA. Evidently the shortage of that they can intelligently advise before a hearing officer, and he
formula.
collar workers belong to the va­ doctors that we read so much our membership as to their may not have the opportunity to
When a conservative ncwspa-| rious AFL unions in the Federal
rights, privileges, and immunities contact one of our agents for ad­
per like the New York Times Government service and in the about is aU hooey.
vice. If possible, they should
If a seamen is turned down under the Constitution.
sheds walrus tears over the mis­ State, County and Municipal
have the services of a lawyer.
SEC.
136.107
Appeal,
(a)
or
employment
by
the
sawbones,
fortune of any group of workers, Employes Union. Government
Brothers,
don't forget that when
Any
person
whose
license
or
he
may
appeal
the
decision
in
we begin suspecting that some­ employes, of course, must depend
your
certificates
are revoked or
certificate
of
service
or
effici­
accordance
to
the
collective
one is spreading something on on legislation to receive wage
suspended,
your
draft hoard is
bargaining agreement. Another ency is revoked or suspended
too thick.
adjustments and their unions appeal is by a doctor satisfactory
may, within thirty days after notified. So if you do not want
The strategy of the newspaper have succeeded in-obtaining such
the decision of the hearing of­ to go into the Army, you should
is obvious. It isn't even faintly legislation for them in most in­ to both parties. No mention is ficer, take an appeal to the dis­ make every effort to see that you
made as to who is going to foot
interested in the welfare of these stances.
trict C.G. officer of the district get a fair and just trial. Have
the bill for the sawbones that
workers. Otherwise it would ad­
If the unorganized white col­ would be satisfactory (?) to both in which the hearing was held. been advised that this whole provise them to join a union which lar workers have failed to make
Every appeal shall set forth as ceedure may he illegal.
could get them all the rights similar gains, they have no one parties.
briefly as possible the name of
A
seaman
will
be
advised
ver­
they are entitled to under the
GULF COAST FISHERMEN
the appellant, the nature of the
to blame but themselves. That bally by the sawbones why he
law and the regulations of the does not mean to say that we
On
November 9 and 10th—^The
was rejected, a full report on his charge, the name of the hear­
War Labor Board.
CPA
held
a meeting in Jackson­
ing officer who made the de­
lack sympathy for them. Sym­ rejection will be supplied upon
Of course, the New York Times pathy is too mild a word. For his request, and will be in con­ cision, the substance of the de­ ville, Florida on the question of
isn't handing out any such ad­ many years the American Feder­ formance with established regu­ cision, and a statement of each ceiling prices on fish.
vice. Its purpose is merely to in­ ation of Labor has told these lations and practices of the U.S. separate ground for appeal.
The general consensus of op­
flame unorganized workers workers that they are bound to Public Health Service.
inion
of the industry representa­
(b) The district C.G. officer
against the justified demands of suffer unless they organize. Their
tives
and the SIU Fishermen's
Mr. Dimock states that this on appeal may affirm, reverse,
union workers for immediate re­ present plight proves the wisdom examination is primarily to stop
representatives
was that the ceil­
or modify the decision of the
vision of the "Little Steel" for- of this advice. Nor is it too late delays in vessels, however, it
ing
prices
on
Mullet
for the pro­
hearing officer or remand the
mula to make up for increases in for them to act upon it. The seems to me that with all this case for further hearing. The ducers should he seven cents.
living costs since May, 1942.
unions of the AFL are glad to red tape, it will be a wonder if
District C.G. officer will not The CPA representatives refused
welcome
new
members
at
any
they
sail
any
vessels
at
all.
consider
evidence which is not to give, any consideration on the
"THE BLAME LIES IN
time.
In
fact,
they
spend
consid­
This
looks
to
me
like
a
contest
part
of
the
record of the hear­ increased cost of nets and other ,
OURSELVES'
erable sums each year trying to to eliminate all the old timers ing and will not consider- any material connected with the cat­
Moreover, we don't for one orgaaize the unorganized.
and set up a super duper class of
ground for appeal which is not ching of fish, and stated that the
minute accept the figures offered
Lest this be considered a pre­ seamen. It wasn't such a long specified by the accused. The ceiling price should he three
•by the New York Times. We have
judiced point of view, we would time back that several companies decision of the District C.G. of­ cents.
extreme doubts that there are as
like to call attention to what refused to hire any seamen over ficer on appeal will be in writ­ The low down on why the
many as fifteen million workers
in America whose wages or sal­ WLB Chairman Davis had to say thirty-five years of age, and the ing and will contain his find­ OPA is insisting, on a ceiling of
aries have not increased as much when he was asked what under­ medical examination was the ings and conclusions. The de­ three cents is that the New Engpaid white collar workers should weapon that they employed to cision of the District C.G. of(Conthined on Page 3)
as 15 per cent since Jan. 1, 1941.
do to get wage increases they are enforce their rules. It also ap­
The fact is that many white entitled to.
pears that the WSA is centraliz­
collar workers are organized into
ing
more of its power into the
GET WISE—ORGANIZE
trade unions affiliated with the
ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
RMO, which indicates that this
American Federation of Labor "Well, one way," said Mr. Da­ centralization of power is the
WEEK OF NOVEMBER 15th TO 20th
which have protected their inter­ vis, "is to join an organization. forerunner for the preparation
ests fully. Thousands of office That is the way I would do."
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL
by the WSA to jettison all col­
workers, for instance, are mem^ Yes, the white collar workers lective bargaining agreements
bers of the AFL Office Employesj should take this lesson to heart. that the maritime unions have
SHIPPED
361
180
275
816
Unions, which have been grouped; They should realize by now that with the employers.
together in a national council.! no worker can afford to be a The United States Shipping
REGISTERED
270
218
246
784
Additional thousands of white
{Continued on Fage 4)
Board was the 1921 version of
Affiliated with the American Federation o/ Labor ,

• 1:

fRtPOUT or\.
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Ifti-

• r-,- -- : •"

-

'' '

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'-i.•fV--

�Friday. December 3, 1943

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

WHArS DOING

Arounil the Ports
NEW ORLEANS
Tomorrow 1 s Thanksgiving
Day. We have to be thankful for
the fact that in this land of ours
all kinds can live and breath and
carry on in the manner to which
they are accustomed.
We are honored by having in
"our fair city a ship which is op=
-Grated by our old friend Mr.
-Squires. After being in port for
five days they got around to pay-Ihg off, at this time it was sud^^denly brought to the attention of
-the above named gentleman that
there were some men aboard the
-scow who had not made the trip.
These men were ordered by the
-First Engineer after the Master
had made the statement that he
was paying off (this was Friday)
even though the men reported
and worked. The deck engineer
:%vOTked forty-four straight hours.
Mr. Squires stated that he would
not pay these men. The whole
•question came down to whether
!or not we should take orders
from anyone but the office. This
;mihd you, after the run around
•we got here from the Firmore
•last summer.
The men that were shipped
from this hall were theh inform­
ed by yours truly that as they
•were not going to get paid they
need not work and at the same
time I told Mr. Squires that he
, was breaking the agreement. Of
course he did not agree.

Next day, after considerable
discussion in the office of the
Company which is the acting
agent, it was agreed to pay these
men for the days they worked
and also for their lodging. When
ready to leave, Mr. Squires in­
formed us that he wanted a
white Stewards department
aboard this ship, even though
she had come in with a colored
department and there had beeri
a colored department shipped. I
informed him that I would put
the jobs on the board.
The colored crew went to the
ship the next day and turned to.
Later this evening Mr. Squires
called and stated that he had or­
dered a white department and
how come that we had sent a col­
ored one. When I asked the gent
if he would order me to pull off
these guys he hedged and stated
that he would not be put on the
spot. The next move in the
game is the gentleman trying to
sign the ship on while she lays in
drydock, even though she will be
here some time. Have already
several calls from members of
the ship's crew who think that
this is a lot of old-fashioned
bunk and that they are not going
to sign on.
Every time that we get one of
this company's ships in here we
have a lot of unneeded trouble.
There is more static involved in
trying to care for a couple of
these lousy packets than any
other company that operates. I

SIU And Tanker Members
On West Coast
Central Registering: and Dispatching Office
Open in SUP Headquarters at San Francisco
For SIU Members and T, C*s in
Deck, Engine and Steward Departments

1

Increased shipping on West Coast by SIU members
has made it necessary to open a separate and complete
business office to be devoted solely to registering and car­
ing for the needs of SIU members in all departments.
All SIU members in San Francisco are required to im­
mediately register in SIU office at 59 Clay St. SIU members
in SUP Branches on the West Coast are to register in the
respective SUP Office and receive an SIU shipping card.
- SIU shipping cards will have preference on SIU ships and
will be recognized by all SUP Dispatchers. SIU Deck mem­
bers will have second preference when SUP members are
available.

For Further Information:
Call your union offices and tanker organizers at the
addresses listed below. You will always finds somebody at
these numbers excepting at night.
SEATTLE, WASH.—86 Seneca St.—Phone Elliott 6752.
—^E. Coester or Johnson.
PORTLAND, OREGON—111 West Burnside St.—Phone
Beacon 4336—John Massey or C. Atkins.
RICHMOND, CALIFORNIA—257 Fifth St.—Phone Rich­
mond 4021—Louie Glebe or Banks.
VANCOUVER, B. C.—340 B. Gamble St.—Phono Pacific
7824—Hugh Murphy.
WILMINGTON, California—440 Avalon Blvd. —Phone
4449.
NEW YORK crry — 105 Broad St. — Phone BOwUng
Green 9-9530—Morris Weisberger.
SAN FRANCISCO—59 Clay St.—Phone Exbrook 8229—
i .-i

Pha Coriley.

--

believe that we would be in or­
der to bring to the attention of
the powers that be the way that
this outfit works and ask them to
compile one of those files that
they delight in forming on sea­
men.
In closing I would like to be
able to cast a glance into the old
crystal glass and see what the
second cook who is coming from
New York to take the Paca does
when he finds that we still ship
from the union hall.
So thanks for Thanksgiving, in
Berlin those still alive are very,
very thankful that their baliwicks are still standing. In
Tokyo the slant-eyes are thank­
ful that there are no more
Shangri-la's. We here in New
Orleans in the SIU are thankful
that there are no Calmar Steam­
ship companies doing business.
Thanks.
I wonder how I would stack
up for a Thanksgiving job.
ARMY, Ageni

SAVANNAH
Shipping in this port has been
slow the last 10 days. I had a
lot of the boys come up from
Tampa and New Orleans but
most of them went right on to
Norfolk in as much as Brother
Rogers was in need of men in
all departments in that port.
Shipping at the present time is
very good here as we have one
West Coast ship in Wilmington
and one in Charleston. Shipping
also looks very good for the com­
ing week. Nothing more to re­
port for now.
CHARLES WAID, Agent

HAWK TELEGRAPHS
PROTEST TO LAND
ON MEDICAL EXAM.

Page Threa

Editor's Mail Bag
Editor
Dear Sir;
P-erhaps you couH helij me. Is
there some sort of pin I could
wear for my husband who died
in the merchant marine in
March? Isn't there something
that I could wear to show that
my husband did his part?
I noticed in your paper of
April 30, 1943, that my husband's
name was listed "In Mcmoriam."
Any information you could give
ihe would help.
Mrs. Herbert Zumpft
(Relatives of merchant seamen
killed in action are entitled to
wear and display the regular gold
service star.—^Editor).
•

•

•

Traffic Det. Hangar 6
National Airport
Washington, D. C.
Editor,
Dear Brother:
This is just to tell you (in case
you don't already know) that in
the current issue of Fortune Mag­
azine there is an article on
unions—and a full page picture
of the "Hall" with Paul reading
off the jobs and a gang of the
fellows standing ai'ound. If I re­
member it's in color.
Again, as usual unfortunately,
there isn't any credit given to
our union. But I got quite a kick
seeing Paul (some of the boys tell
me that he's been going to sea
again) and that now famous ship­
ping board again.
I quit the sea in March for a
special assignment with Air
Transport Command (from cargo

to cargo) and the work here is ad
exciting (and as secret) as hell.
Every General and every bigshot comes through here and wa
get to see them all.
But every so often I miss tha
water and the ships and tha
steady clanging of the engine
room from below deck. And
some how flying is a sleepy busi­
ness.
Incidentally, in the next issue
(probably hits the newstands on
January 1st) of World At War
Magazine, there is the story of
my voyage to Murmansk in the
days when it was stiU something
to talk about. I mention it be­
cause I deliberately mentioned
the SIU in it twice; I'll get a per­
sonal kick seeing our name in
print after getting sick of aU the
hot air the Curranumist were
throwing out.
Then there's another magazine
story coming out soon in which I
quoted Paul and again mentioned
the Union. (This time they would
only aUow one mention.)
Got a note from Brother Joe
Whelen the other day. Joe fol­
lowed in my footsteps (and our
advice is don't anybody else do
it) and joined the Army to "get
away from the sea for awhile."
So they stuck him in the Rescue
Boat Squadron of the Air Corps.
He was just born for salt water!
Writing this because he men­
tioned getting his retirement card
•and I remember Uiat in the ex­
citement I forgot to put in for
mine. I'd like to now.
Best regards to all the
Brothers,
Pvt. LIONEL SIMON

/

REPORT FROM

Washington

Telegram sent to WSA on day
to a better share than they are
{Continued from Page 2)
of meeting to consider the phy­
land operators do not want fish­ now receiving.
sical exams.
The New England fish dealers
ermen from up north to go south
are
cleaning up and do not want
Admiral E. S. Land,
this year. The practice in the past
their
fishermen to go south. Prob­
Administrator
has been for fishermen
from
ably the only way to put the
War Shipping Administration
around Glocester, Mass., to go to
Department of Commerce Bldg. the southern fishing fields in the skids on Mr. Trigg is a general
strike of fishermen.
Washington, D. C.
winter. Now if the CPA set a
low ceiling on southern fish, this
Dimock of Recruitment and will have the tendency to not en­
Manning Organization is attempt­ courage fishermen to go to the
ing to make compulsory a phy­ usual southern fishing grounds.
R. H. TAURIN has overlime
sical examination for all men in The New England fishermen
coming
from the Calmar Line.
the merchant marine. Any rigid are at present on strike against
See
patrolman
Sheehan about it.
physical rules would inevitably the OPA boondongling on the
n«
eliminate many old-time seamen, fish ceiling set up in the New
R.
McLAURIN
has
overtime
usually rated men, so vitally England Area.
coming
from
the
New
York
of­
needed in this war emergency. Mr. Charles Trigg, Chief Fish
fice
of
the
Calmar
Line.
Compulsory physical examina­ Consultant in the OPA, was
« • •
tions would play into the hands formerly a • fish dealer, and his
of labor's enemies and give them policy has been to give all the Crew which paid off S.S. Alcoa
an opportunity to deal us and the gravy to the fish dealers. He has Voyager in Sept. 1943, has $10
war effort a blow by black-ball­ given them so much gravy in the linen money coming. Collect 17
ing many men from their trade. New Englaiid aiea that the deal­ Battery Place. New York City.
» » •
Dimock says that ships have ers themselves have made the Steward Department of S.S.
missed sailing schedules due to statement that the fishermen
Cape Henlopen which paid oft
ill health of crews. We brand should be given a better share of November 1943, has overtime
this a lie and challenge him to the proceeds of the catch. In coming from the Bull Line.
prove statement. For morale of statements made before the War
»
»
»
men sailing the ships, for the Labor Board the dealers admit- The logging of the Steward's
best interest of the industry, we ed that they are making more Department of the S.S. Daniel
appeal for. your aid in defeating money now than before the ceil­ Willard has been reversed by the
ing prices were set up, and that
this proposal.
the fishermen should be entitled Commissioner after a length]^
JOHN HAWK
triid. The men involved can col- ^
Secretary-Treasurer,
lect
extra meal money and
Keep In Touch With log their
Atlantic &amp; Gulf District
refund from Calmar Line
Seafarers International Union
Your Draft Board
Office.

MONEY DUE

,

... .

.:v

.SA'ikse,!-. .,'1

�smm

Page Four

??&gt;•- •,

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. December 3, 1943

Macauley Whips Up Strike The NY Times And
Scare In Smearing SIU-SUP Crocodile Tears
I

!•

New ^Luxury'
Life Rafts
Tested

{Continued from Page 1)
jef a" unions several months ago It looks like this Proposed Order
{Continued from Page 2)
that the SIU-SUP was in favor of
been incorporated wherever has been very carefully set up so rugged individualist. Theyshoulc
letting men go to sea with ven­ possible, in this proposed Gener­ there can be no come-back in see the futility of bargaining as
ereal diseases and other contag- al Order." This statement is un­ case of discrimination.
individuals in an industrial
true, insofar as we arc concern
eous ailments.
EXISTING PROVISIONS
economy which is highly organ­
ed, because we are definitely and
AMPLE SAFEGUARDS
ized.
To set the record straight once
absolutely opposed to this pro­ You are well aware of the fact
more—we are in favor of ven­
Isn't it just a silly manifests
posed program dealing with that every merchant seaman who
ereal inspection. We are in favor
tion
of false pride for an office
medical examinations for sea­ goes to sea today must pass a
of eliminating from the crews
worker
to consider himself above
{Continued from Page 1) •
men, beyond what already exists Public Health examination be­
any man who has a disease that
his
fellow
workers?
Isn't
he
cut
frying
pan with fifteen pounds of
and has been functioning so well fore he is issued his certificate of
constitutes a health menace lo
ting
off
his
nose
to
spite
his
face
fuel
also
took the forty-five-foo|
for many years past.
seamanship. You are also aware if he fails to join with other of­ drop required by USCG regula­
his shipmates.
Mr. Dimock further states: "I
We are opposed to the rigid believe that this program of that if a man gets sick aboai-d fice workers in a union to protect tions, into San Francisco Bay.
physical standards proposed by medical examinations is an im­ ship, he is entitled to go to the the interest of all white collar
The stove and fuel are avail«
Macauley and the Stalinists portant step in safeguarding the Marine Hospital. You should workers?
able as extra equipment if th«
which would eliminate the old- health of sea-going personnel and give the merchant seamen a lit­
It seems shameful to us that armed forces or Maritime Com­
timers suffering from minor in­ in avoiding ship delays which tle credit to this extent that no office workers, who have the mission want them.
capacities which do not effect are caused by illness of crew man who is really ill will go benefits of better education, Like other standard rafts de­
their efficiency on the job. The members while vessels are on a aboard a ship and take a chance should be so far behind workers veloped during the war, it car­
on his own health! We realize in overalls when it comes to ad­ ries signaling and safety equip­
proposed physical requirements voyage."
the Washington Bureaucrats who vancement of. their economic ment required by the Coasf
could be construed to eliminate
NO SHIPS DELAYED
spend their time and the tax­ status through organization.
from the industry many men who
Guard, including distress signal^
We do not know of a cheaper payers' money drafting these
receive "battle shock", impaired
signal
pistols, signaling mirrors*
Potentially^ the office workers
hearing, etc., caused from bomb­ way of trying to put over a pro­ Proposed General Orders do not could have one of the largest and illuminating oil, drinking cups,
ings while delivering the goods gram such as this Proposed Gen­ have too much respect for a mer­
strongest unions in the country if matches, fishing tackle, blanketSJ
-to the war fronts. Fine gratitude eral Order has in view, than by chant seamen's intelligence, but they would only throw off the compass and electric waterlight.
to show these men who have stating it will "avoid delaying a seaman has that much sense, I ridiculous mental hazards against
Measuring 8 by 16 feet by 41,
risk their very lives in this war. ship,S caused by illness of crew can assure you.
inches,
the reversible raft is de­
What is wrong with the pres- joining a union which have been signed for twenty persons, but
No provisions are being made to members." To our knowledge,
cleverly set up by employer
rehabilitate them in-shore jobs— (and we thing it is pretty exten­ sent et-up? Today some steam­ propaganda.
thirty-six have been aboard at
but they would become victims sive covering 40,000 Merchant ship companies have physical
one time. There are the usual ten
of the government's war upon Seamen, covering some 900 ships examinations. Others have not. As a member of an AFL Office quarts of water per person, four­
on the West Coast, not counting But, as stated before, and as you Workers Union ourself, we can teen ounces of pemmican and thd
the unions.
There is no question in any- those on the East Coast) at no well know, every merchant sea­ testify that such union member­ same amounts of malted millc
. one's mind about how the rank time has any vessel been delay­ man must pass a Public Health ship has not interfered in the tablets, chocolate and "C" Army
and file seamen stand on this is­ ed due to illness of the crew examination before he is issued slightest degree with our inde­ ration biscuit. Protective cur­
pendence of thought or action.
his certificate of seamanship.
sue. The NMU leadership know since the war started!
tains, sails and canopy are all
We can also testify from our painted orange to make them
For
years
the
shipowners
have
that there is a near-revolt in the
We challenge you to refute this
attempted to discriminate against personal observation that union visible long distances from sea ox;
NMU. Macauley knows how the statement!
seamen
through company doc­ office workers are better paid air.
other unions feel because a flood
This Proposed General Order
of telegrams has been descend­ for merchant seamen will mean tors, and seamen have been able and work under better conditions Irhe Young company expects to
ing upon his office. Almost every nothing but the elimination of to appeal to the Public Health than non-union office workers.
lit top production for its new
So we say to the unorganized raft at its Oakland assemply line
port on both cojists has been old-time seamen from the indus­ officers if they felt they were be­
heard from, and in no uncertain try. You know, of course, that ing discriminated against, and in office workers of the country— about Jan. 1, holding econtracts to
terms.
there are thousands of men be­ many cases company doctor's de­ don't envy union members who furnish various Liberty shipa;
If Macauley can twist this into tween the ages of 40 and 60—and cisions have been repudiated by are better paid. Get wise and other types of cargo vessels,
join an AFL union yourselves!
a strike threat—let him do so. over—who still go to sea. Ex­ Public Health Service.
tankers and transports.
s
—Philip Pearl
»
»
»
Now, the shipowners will be in
cepting when someone is after
Following is the text of Lunde- their scalps, they are called "Old a -different position. The ship­
berg's letter which sent Macaul- Sea Dogs." You know too that owners through this Proposed stonewall.
In our frank opinion, this is
ey's blood-pressure to such dizzy these men are not all 100 per General Order, will set War
part
of a long range program
heights:
cent physical specimens. How Shipping Administration, (man­
adopted
by the bureaucrats of
could they be, after spending 30 aged and controlled by them­
the
WSA,
in conjunction with
San Francisco, Calif., to 40 years of their life in some selves, up to do the dirty work
AUGUST DAUM:
certain
shipowners,
to move in
November 2-3, 1943 of the rotten, vermin-ridden, for the shipowners, and thru this
Your
wife has been injured^*
and eliminate old-time union
leaky and unsanitary fo'cstles, procedure, eliminate old-timers
and
would
like to hear from you.
Captain Edward Macauley,
seamen. This is directly in line
which were so prevalent until from the industry.
She
is
at
the
Huntington Valley
Deputy War Shipping
with your training program, and
the Unions were able to adjust
Country
Club,
Abington, Pa.
. Administrator
MAKE WAY FOR YOUR
with your Recruitment and Man­
«•
»
»
these conditions?
c/o War Shipping
TRAINEES
ning Organization — and how
WALLACE
H.
SMOKE.
Jr.
Administration,
There is a reason for it. The comes your "medical program."
PLEA FOR OLD-TIMERS
Contact
the
Tampa
Agent.
He
Department of Commerce Bldg,
Now, there are many old-tim­ War Shipping Administration has It will work handily in using has important information for
Washington, (25) D.C.
ers, whose eyes might not be so spent millions of the tax-payers' the taxpayei's money to build up
(Copies to House Merchant strong at 50, as they were at 20 money enrolling "new men" for and guarantee jobs for the fu­ you.
Marine and
—whose hearing might not be so the Shipping industry, and it is ture for the "right" guys—pro­ money, in the high-handed man­
Fisheries Committee.
good—his blood pressure, might no secret that in most cases they viding they do their dirty work ner in which you people are doWilliam Green, President,
be a little higher—he might be are being taught to hate the against the American seamen, ng.
A. F. of L.
flat-footed — or there might be Union seamen. What would be and if the people in your Bu­
We are sending copies of this
Mathew Dushane, Wash.
any number of small physical sweeter for the shipowners and reaus spent a little less time in letter to all members of the Mer­
^
Rep., SIU of N.A.
defects which an aspiring medi­ politicians, who run this set-up, figuring out ways and means of chant Marine and Fisheries Com­
John Hawk, Scc'y.-Treas.,
cal officer might use as an excuse than to be able to show that the putting seamen behind the eight mittee of our Senate and Con- J_
Atlantic-Gulf District,
to turn a man down for "physical Union man gets off the ship, and ball, and a little more for the gress, who so ably managed and
SIU of N.A.
is being replaced by the WSA- war effort, we would be much laid down the law for the Mer­
disability."
Marshall Dimock, Asst.
In the Proposed General Order trained newcomer? Do you ex­ further ahead. This proposed chant Seamen, and whose wise
Deputy Adm.
it also states that if a man is re­ pect to justify your expenditures General Order, worked out by a handling of the merchant marine|
p!
Recruitment-Manning,
bunch of $10,000.00 a year stiffs, affairs is directly responsible for fg
jected by "your medical officer" in this fashion?
WSA and others.)
—he can appeal to the Public How do we know we're going with nothing to do but scheme to the role the merchant marine has ®
Dear Sir;
Health Service. This evidently is to get a square deal from the keep themselves in office, will played in this war — and even
On November 23, 1943, we re­ iviearit as a bit of satire—because, medical-appointees of the WSA? disrupt the now-efficient sailing you cannot deny that it has been
ceived a communication from one as we understand it, the medical It is a certainty he won't get ap­ of American ships.
a noble one.
Should any ships be delayed
of your men, Mr. Marshall E. examining officer will be ap­ pointed unless he is "right" in
Our representative in Wash­
Dimock, Asst. Deputy Adminis­ pointed through the public health politics with the crowd running through this proposed medical ington, D. C., Mr. Dushane, wiH
trator for Recruitment and Man­ office. So, how far is a man's the WSA, and therefore he will scheme of yours, we will lay the appear at the November 30tb
owe his loyalty to whoever ap­ responsibility right in your lap. meeting and further outline
ning. This communication con­ appeal going to go?
tained a copy of a Proposed Gen­ You further state in your pro­ points him—and the appoint­ Our organization will absolute­ opposition to this program.
ly and definitely not cooperate in
eral Order regarding medical ex­ posed General Order that a man ment comes from the WSA.
By Orders of the Membership,
this respect.
NO
PROTECTION
FOR
who
has
been
rejected
shall
be
aminations for crews on War
We challenge your authority to Harry Lundeberg, Secy.-Treas,,,
SEAMEN
Shipping Administration's ves­ verbally advised, if he requests
Now, you can not deny that sit back in Washington, D. C. and Sailors Union of the Pacific.
sels. Mr. Dimock's letter goes on it, as to the reasons for his rejec­
r-' C to say—"The suggestions made tion. This is also a joke—because the WSA is largely controlled by lay down laws and regulations President, Seafarers Interna­
• by the Maritime Labor Unions to if a man is rejected for medical the shipowners. Where does the affecting hundreds and thousands tional Union of North Americd
(Representing 40,000 American|
• Dr. Daniel Blain, in response to reasons, why don't the medical seamen's protection come in? Not of men, and involving the spend­
his letter sent to the Presidents officers put it down in writing? in this deal! He's up against a ing of millions of taxpayers' Merchant seamen.)

'£^%cnals

'••f'

•

, .

.r .

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MACAULEY WHIPS UP STRIKE SCARE IN SMEARING SIU-SUP&#13;
USS IS PICKETED BY ANGRY MERCHANTMEN&#13;
NEW 'LUXURY' LIFE RAFTS TESTED&#13;
THE SAGA OF ALCOA SCOUT IS TOLD&#13;
THE NY TIMES AND CROCODILE TEARS&#13;
SIU AND TANKER MEMBERS ON WEST COAST&#13;
HAWK TELEGRAPHS PROTEST TO LAND ON MEDICAL EXAM</text>
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P^^BERSJjocf
1

OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
^ SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
Vol. V.

NEW YORK. N.Y.. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 10. 1943

No. 36

Pilot Attack On SIU Reveals
Desperation Of Curran &amp; Co.
Attention All Stewards
Department Men
Turn to page two for a complete analysis
of NMU, MCS and SIU Stewards Department
contracts on freight vessels. Read the facts
which prove that the SIU leads the industry
in winning conditions for your department.

Joe Curran and Company are headed for the skids! If anyone still doubts that there
is a deep rift between the Stalinist leadership of the NMU and the rank and file, let that
person get the December 3rd copy of the Pilot and read the hysterical charges hurled
against the SIU. In a front page story and in a long editorial on page two, the NMU
leadership accuses the SIU of being shipowners agents, of breaking down conditions in
'sweet­
the industry by signing "sweet-*
^
heart contracts" in the middle of vert the attention of the NMU Stewards Department contract
the night, and of generally sa­ rank and file from the sell-outs between the SIU and its con­
botaging the struggle of the sea­ of their leaders. The storm of tracted companies, is a "sweet­
rank and file resentment within heart contract" which was nego­
men for wages and conditions.
the NMU against the double tiated in the middle of the night
13ih STREET ON DEFENSIVE crossings they have received, has and is "dangerously lowering the •
reached such proportions that standards" in the industrv.
I
'
This outburst by the Curran Curran no longer has any hope
regime is extremely significant
IT'S A SWEETHEART
of crushing it—he can now only
for it reveals the desperate struggle to divert its fury away
The facts are: the SIU Stew­
straits in which the 13th Street from himself and toward some
ards
Department contracts are
boys find themselves within the other group (in this case the
the
best
in the industry, and the
union. They hope to make the SIU).
new
revisions
mean even great­
SIU a "whipping boy" and diThat Curran and Company er improvements. If raising a
have choosen the SIU as the fo­ Steward's wage from $157.50 to
cal point of their diversionary $212.50, if raising a Cook's wage
tactic shows the real desperation from $137.50 to $182.50, if rais­
of their case. For years the NMU ing a Baker's wage from $122.58
leadership has given the SIU the to $152.50 constitutes a "sweet­
silent treatment in the Pilot. heart contract," then brother:
They hoped and prayed that "sweetheart contracts" are what
their members would forget that we want.
«r-—
there was 'such "an organization
Curran has the guts (or stupid­
as the SIU, and that they would ity) to call our contract "sweet­
never, never compare the wages heart" when the Stewards on
and working conditions of the NMU CI and C2 ships carrying
union representative to seamen two organizations. For Curran to 150 men or more are receiving
being examined for venereal di­ now challenge us on the ques­ $147.50. SIU Stewards receive
sease, or other communicable di­ tions of wages and working con­ $85 more per month than do
seases, but insisted that any sea­ ditions can only mean that the NMU Stewards, and he screams
man who is turned down be­ beefing of his rank and file is so that we are undermining the
cause he has a commxmicable di­ great that he can no longer ig­ waterfront conditions.
sease, measures shall be taken to nore the difference between the
What we are doing is under­
take care of him until he is NMU and SIU contracts, and mining the NMU leadership—
cured. Dr. Ossoford promised that must attempt to explain away that's why they scream!
they shall be taken care of, and our superior conditions with a
ASKS OUR WAGE
advised the representatives that smear campaign against the SIU
the Public Health Service is go­ as an organization and against
The Pilot, in its page two edit­
ing to set up T-B wards for spe­ individual leaders of our union. orial proclaims that SIU wages
cial treatment of merchant sea­
and conditions are not acceptable
MISSING PORK CHOPS
men, in the port of New York
to the "rank and file of all sea­
and San Francisco. When men
But he's spitting into the wind. men's unions." The facts are that
are nearly cured they hope that The time is rapidly passing when not only, is the rank and file of
the men will go to Fort Stanton the NMU can be kept together the NMU and MCS demanding
to get hardened up. All the ex­ with Curran's crap and Stalin's wages and conditions comparable
penses to go to Fort Stanton will reputation. It's pork chops that to ours, but the NMU leadership
be paid by the U.S. Public Health count in a trade union, and Joe itself has been forced to make
Service.
just can't serve them up.
these demands. Curran's cam­
The proposed standards for the
Curran has dared to call our paign for "equal pay for equal
medical examination are now go­ contracts phoney and to charge work" is a campaign to win from
ing to be further discussed with that the SIU is undermining the War Labor Board the SIU
Captain Macauley by the doctors conditions on the waterfront. scale of wages and overtime pro­
and they will be sent to all OK, since he has called the game, visions.
unions for comments.
It's all down in black and
we intend to lay the facts on the
Received and am still receiv­ line. And when we get through, white. Turn to page 6 of the Dec.
ing wires on this matter, some of Curran will wish that he had 3 Pilot and you find Howard Mcthe wires were not sent to Ad­ "stood in bed."
Kenzie listing the NMU's wage
miral Land. In the future all
The Pilot charges that the re demands now pending before the
telegrams should be sent to the cently negotiated revisions in the
{Confhttied on Page 4)
head of the government agency
involved in the dispute, copies
via air mail should be sent to me.
ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
I am of the opinion that the
original standard on the medical
WEEK OF NOVEMBER 22nd TQ 27th
examination will be modified.
Brice Holcomb, who was for­
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL
•s-il
merly a conciliator with the De­
EI
SHIPPED
partment of Labor is now in
370
200
295
865
Washington representing the
REGISTERED
281
218 257
754
Painters Union (AFL) in which

fRtPOWT on.
^ASHinGTOrV.
• BY MATT-MEW DBSHAME-*

V

MEDICAL EXAMINATIONS
Attended the meeting called
by Captain Edward Macauley,
Deputy Administrator of the
WSA. The proposed medical
examination will no doubt be
hooked up with the RMO, as Mr.
Marshall Dimock was chairman
of the meeting.
'Three doctors from the Public
Health Service outlined' what
they-felt should be the standards.
They were Drs. Blain, Fuller and
Ossoford.
' Dr. Ossoford and Dr. Blain
§eem to have a better and firmer
footing as to what form of an
examination would be better to
safeguard the, health of the crew.
Dr. Fuller from all indications is
out on some kind of an experi­
mental expedition. One of his
statements was that a seaman
may be able to sail coastwise, or
to South Africa, but would not
be allowed to sail the North At­
lantic. Upon being pressed for a
full statement on his reasons for
this, his answer wasn't a very
convincing one—asthma, etc.
Asked'iiim how a doctor would
know during the war just where
a ship was going, and how any
doctor would be qualified to de­
termine what run a seaman could
sail on, that is if he had asthma,
or some other ailment, when the
Master of the vessel does not
know where his vessel .is bound
for. His answer on this question
was very vague, and did not
make any sense.
Brought up the old angle that
the shipowners used to blackball
men. The high blood pressure

angle, and whether seamen un­
der their proposed examination,
would be barred from going to
sea if they had high blood pres­
sure. He stated that in some
cases they would not be allowed
to sail.
Asked him how and what ef­
fect high blood pressure would
have on any person who sails as
a bos'un, and did he know what
is required of a bos'un on a ship.
His answer from all indications,
implied that he must have the
physical qualifications and be ac­
tive as a half back. Advised him
that any bos'un who is an ex­
hibitionist and raves and rants
around a ship's deck, in most
cases would not know his job.
In regards to high blood pres­
sure, the union has sent several
letters to Captain Macauley, and
they weren't answered for weeks
at a time. Upon receiving Harry
Lundeberg's letter protesting the
medical examination. Captain
Macauley immediately wired an
answer to H.L., and followed it
up with a letter, in addition he
gave a release to the press. He
certainly must have high blood
pi'essure, and although 1 would
not agree that he .should be fired
for hitting the ceiling on reading
the letter, he probably should be
relieved for his continually
bungling of the hiring practices
of the industry.
All the unions indicated that
they are opposed to any medical
examination that- would be used
to eliminate old-timers and mili­
tant men from the industry. No
opposition was raised by any

{Continued on Page 4)

�Page Two

THE

SEAFARERS

L,0 G

Friday, December'10, 1943 |

Read These Facts And Then Decide
Which One Really Gets Conditions
Here Are The Stewards Department Working Rules For Frieight Vessel^ 1
As Provided In The NMU, MCS, And SIU Contracts. YOU Figure Who Is . j
Fighting For [And Winning The Best] Conditions In The Stewards Dept.
Contract of the
National Maritime Union
OVERTIME RATE
,85 pel- hour

Standard Contract
Attantic &amp; Gulf Dist.
Seafarers International Union

Contract of the
Marine Cooks &amp; Stewards
Cooks and Stewards
All Other Ratings

85
75

.90 per hour

HOURS OF WORK

On freight vessels the working day at sea or in
port shall not exceed eight hours in a spread of
twelve hours and when practicable shall be between
the hours of 6 A.M. and 6 P.M.; however, no addi­
tional compensation for work shall be approved, or
paid, for the performance of regular routine duties
pertaining to the Stewards' Department unless or­
dered to be performed outside regular scheduled
working hours (routine duties such as preparing and
serving three regular meals, cleaning of quarters,
galley, messrooms, stewards' refrigerator boxes, and
linen rooms). The provisions of this section relating
to hours of work shall apply to the chief steward.

SATURDAY AFTERNOONS,
SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS

In port all work performed on Saturday after­
noons. Sundays, and holidays shall be paid for at
the overtime rate. If required to work Saturday
afternoons and to serve supper, they shall receive a
minimum of four hom-'s overtime and if required to
work Sundays and holidays and three regular meals
are served, they shall receive a minimum of eight
hours' overtime in addition to their regular wages.
If required to work outside of regular schedule
;
after 6 P.M. on Saturday afternoons, Sundays, and
-^^olidays they shall be paid according to the addi­
tional hours worked. Should the ship sail before
6 P.M. on Saturday afternoons, Sundays, and holi­
days overtime shall be paid for the actual time
worked prior to sailing; however, only the minimum
number of men required to "perform the work will
be required to stay on board.

\IC

PAINTING

Stewards' Department emploj'-ees may be re­
quired to do painting in all rooms and quarters, ex­
cept firemen's and sailors' quarters. For this work,
personnel of Stewards' Department who actually en­
gage in this work shall be paid extra compensation
at the rate of 70c per hour.

The principle of the eight hour day in a spread
of twelve hours is recognized, and the manning scale
for the Stewards Department herein agreed to is
based upon this principle. It is further agreed no
overtime will be paid for serving the three regular
meals at regular hours or performing other ordinary
work incidental to duties of the Steward's Depart­
ment work.

The hours of labor for the Stewards' Department
shall be eight (8) hours in a spread of thirteen (13)
hours while at sea and eight (8) hours in a spread of
twelve (12) hours while in port. This applies Iq
freight vessels.
.1.1

(The NMU calls for 8 hours •when "practicable**
The MCS endorses the "principle" of an 8 hour
day. The SlU contract has no such shipowner rrcape clauses and words—it is irott-clad.)
J

t

In home ports on the Pacific Coast, all work on
Saturday afternoons, Sundays and holidays, except
on days of arrival and departure shall be paid for
at the overtime rate.
The rules set forth in (a) of Section 2 shall also
apply in the Port of New York only to vessels in
the Inter-coastal North Atlantic Ti-ade; in the Port of
Baltimore only to all vessels engaged in the Intercoastal South Atlantic Trade which do not call at
the Port of New York; in the Port of New Orleans
only for all vessels engaged in the Gulf Trade; and
in the Port of Honolulu only to all vessels engaged
in the Pacific Coast Hawaiian Trade.
In lieu of overtime on Saturday afternoon and
Sundays in ports other than home ports on freight­
ers, overtime will be paid for work on holidays
whether in port or at sea.

(a) The regular overtime rate shall be paid id
all members of the Stewards' Department for all
work on Sundays and Holidays and work in excess
of four (4) hours on Saturdays while the vessel is in
port.
(b) On freighters equipped to carry 12 passen­
gers, the Stewards' Department may be reduced on
Saturday afternoons, Sundays and Holidays, and
only those men required to remain on duty for nor­
mal freight ship requirements of the Company shall
receive overtime.
(c) On all freight vessels of the Company, ex­
cept as provided in (b) of this section, the Stewards'
Department shall not be reduced on Saturdays, Sun­
days and Holidays.
{The MCS contract provides overtime only in home '
ports—and then not on days of arrival or depart- I
lire. NMU and SIU receives overtime ht ALL i
ports.)

Members of the Steward's Department shall not
be required to paint staterooms or salons, but may
be required to paint such as crew's quarters, messrooms, galley and salon floors and waterways. This
rule shall not prohibit employers carrying men to
do all such work.

Members of the Stewards' Department shall nol
be required to chip, sougee, scrape or paint, uplei|S.
the regular overtime rate shall be paid to members
actually engaged in performing the work, for the aglual hours worked: however, spotting up with sougee
shall be done within the regulsur working hours.

No Overtime
I?:

BAKING BREAD

All bread is to be made aboard ship by the second-cook-and-baker. within his regular hours.

No Provision

In Continental Ports of the United States bread
shall be supplied from shore when available for port
use and if not supplied two (2) hours' overtime shall
be paid to the Second Cook and Baker for eadi
batch of bread baked.

MEALS IN PORT

For lunches or meals served to officials, guests
or shore labor in port, regardless of number, the sum
of 30c for each meal served shall be paid and equally
distributed to the men actually engaged m the prep­
aration and serving of same.

($1.20 for 4 meals)

i

For lunches or nieals served to officials and/or
guests numbering from three to not more than six
persons, one hour overtime shall be allowed to each
of those actually engaged. No extra compensation
for less than three guests at any one meal.
When the deck officer orders meals served to
longshoremen or other shore labor on board any
vessel the sum of thirty (30) cents for each meal
served to each long.shoreman shall be paid and shall
be equally distributed to the men in the Steward's
Department actually engaged in the work.
($1.20 for 4 meals, under second paragraph)

When extra meals are served to other than regu­
lar members of the crew signed on articles, gun
crew, passenger and/or pilots when carried, over­
time shall be paid to not exceeding three (3) mem­
bers of the Stewards' Department at the rate of one
(1) hour each for every four (4) meals prepared and
served.
The amount of extra nieals served shall he to­
taled and computed in accordance with paragraph
(a) of this section at the end of each voyage.
(SIU contract adds up to $2,70 paid for each 4
meals served.)

No meals or coffee will be served to anyone
other than crew without written authority of the
Master or officer in charge. Cooks, Messmen or those
engaged in serving 9:00 p.m., 12:00 midnight or 3:00
a.m. hot lunches will be allowed three (3) hours'
overtime each for preparing and serving each liinch.
Two Messmen will serve 9i:00 p.m., .12:00 midnight
or 3:00 a.m. cold lunches and will be paid two (2)r
hours' overtime each for preparing and serving each
lunch.

Members of the Stewards' Department actually
engaged in serving hot midnight or 3 A.M' lunch
are to be allowed three (3) hours' overtime each for
preparing and serving same and when serving iundt
at nine (9) P.M., two (2) hours' overtime shall ba
paid for preparing and serving same.
,

MIDNIGHT SUPPERS

Employees actually engaged in preparing and
i;!.. serving hot midnight suppers sh^I be paid two
hours' overtime for same.

(Continued on Page 3)

I''

�S Friday, December 10, 18'£3

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Three i

MORE FACTS ON NMU, MCS &amp; SIU CONTRACTS
{Continued from Page 2)

CARRYING STORES

Members of the Stewards" Dep?-tment shall not
he required to carry on board heavy stores, provis­
ions, and laundry. However, mernbers of the Stew­
ards^ Department shall be required to carry on board
working stores within their regular working hours.
They shall also be required to stow away all stores
and provisions placed on board by a shore gang,
longshoremen, or the Deck Department and placed
convenient to refrigerator bdxes and storerooms,
without payment of additional compensation if per­
formed in their regular hours of duty. They shall
"also stow away all laundry placed on board by long­
shoremen or the Deck Department.

Members of the Steward's Department shall not
be required to carry heavy stores and provisions ex­
cept laundry on board, hut all stores and pro\.'isiohs
shall be stowed by the Steward's Department.

N •

MANNING SCALE

There shall be no. change in the present man­
ning scale of the Stewards' Department. On freight
ships in trades where occasional passengers are carfied, the members of the Stewards' Department serv­
ing such passengers shall be compensated by .an
amount equal to five dollars ($5) per passenger for
the trip provided the trip does not exceed five days
in duration. In the event the trip exceeds five days
in duration then each member of the Stewards' De­
partment engaged in serving the passengers shall
receive five dollars ($5) per passenger per trip. How­
ever, the owner shall have the option of placing
-additional men in the Stewards' Department when
deemed necessary, and when so assigned no extra
compensation will be paid for such service to pas­
sengers.

(a) Members of Ihe Stewards' Department
not be required to carry any stores or linen to or
from ihe dock, but when stores or linen or delivered
to storeroom doors, meat or chill box doors, they
shall place same in their respective places and over­
time shall be paid for such work to all men required
to put in more than eight (8) hours' work that day.
(b) Daily supplies of provisions such as milk,
bread and vegetables shall,.be stored away without
the payment of overtime.
{Overtime is paid for ALL work under paragraph
(a) of the SIU contract because this is not coti~
sidered routine work.)

No Extra Compensation Provided,

If is agreed thai meals served passengers will
not be considered extra meals.
When passengers are carried it is agreed that if
one to three passengers inclusive are carried, one (1)
hour overtime per day will be paid to each of fou*
(4) members of the Stewards' Department (including
the Steward). If four (4) or more passengers are car­
ried the payment shall be two (2) hours' overtime
per day.
This section does not apply to those freighters
regularly carrying passengers where the Stewards'
Department Personnel exceeds six (6) persons.

No Overtime

No Overtime

When meal hours are delayed or shifted on ac­
count of crew being occupied and unable to eat at
their regular meal hour, all necessary members of
the Stewards' Department will be paid at the regu­
lar overtime rate for the time delayed.

LIGHTING STOVES
No Overtime

No Overtime

On vessels which still have coal burning stoves
the man who starts the fires in the morning shall be
given one-half (Vi) hours' overtime each day.

No Overtime

Overtime shall be paid to all members of the
Stewards' Department actually engaged in cleaning
meat box and chill boxes.

DELAYING OF MEALS

CLEANING MEAT BOXES
No Overtime
SORTING LINEN

Work performed by any member of the Stew­
ards' Department, other than the regular routine
work as defined in this agreement, shall be paid for
at the regular overtime rate. This clause is added
due to the fact that the Stewards' Department has a
required amount of routine duty to perform within
their 8 hours. Sorting and counting linen, cleaning
spare rooms not occupied by crew or passengers,
shall be paid for at the regular overtime rate.

No Overtime

\ No Overtime

C\&lt;-SHIFTING SHIP

No Overtime

No Overtime
WAGES — OFFSHORE
Chief Steward
Chief Cook
Second Cook
Mcssman
Crew Messman

WAGES — COASTWISE
Chief Steward
Chief Cook
S^ond Cook
Messman
Crew Messman

-

The day vessel arrives from sea at a port of call
shall be considered the day of arrival, and smy sub­
sequent moves from thcd port occurring in inland
waters, bays and sounds, shall be considered as
shifting ship and overtime shall be pciid for Satur­
day afternoons. Sundays and holidays.

(ALL WAGES
$147.50
132.50
117.50
87.50
82.50

INCLUDE BASIC SCALE PLUS EMERGENCY INCREASES)
Chief Steward
$152.50
Chief Steward
Chief Cook
137.50
Chief Cook
Second Cook
122.50
Second Cook
Messman
87,50
Messman
Crew Messman
82.50
Utility

$157.58
137.50
122.50
87.50
87.50

Chief Steward
Chief Cook
Second Cook
Messman
Crew Messman

$157.50
137.50
122J50
87.50
87.50

$140.00
125.00
110.00
80.00
75.00

$152.50
137.50
122.50
87.50
82.50

Chief Steward
Chief Cook
Second Cook
Messman
Utility

All provisions in the MCS and SIU contracts apply to both offshore and coastwise runs. However, the NMU gets overtime for
Saturday afternoon, Sundays and holidays on coastwise run only when the ship is in its home port — and not then on days of
arrival and departure. Hiese finky rules apply to all three departments. The NMU contract rea'ds as follows:
The boatswain and carpenter shall perform their
usual duties in connection with mooring and un­
mooring between the hours of 8 A.M. and 5 P.M. on
such days of arrival without payment of overtime.
In the event of a vessel sailing on day of arrival,
the above conditions shall apply.
Section 2. The oiler on watch, if not required in
the engine room, shall oil and care for, the deck
machinery while cargo is being worked, on such
days of arrival, without payment of overtime.
Section 3. Working Hours, Stewards. The Stew­
ards' Department personnel shall perform their nor­
mal duties within eight hours on freight vessels, and
on passenger vessels if no passengers are on board,

Recognizing the critical economic situation
which confronts the coastwise trade, and the absence
of any Governmental subsidy, it is distinctly under­
stood and agreed that the following provisions shall
apply on "days of arrival" at all ports other than the
home port, on all vessels engaged exclusively in the
ynited States Atlantic Gulf and Puerto Rican coast­
wise trade (that is, all such vessels not touching any
foreign ports).
V
Seclion i. Days of Atxival. "\yhen "days of ar­
rival" fall on Saturdays, Suntlays or holidays, the
watch on duty shall not be paid overtime for the
normal watch duties. In the Deck Depm-tment nor­
mal duties sliall include gangway or anchor watch.

mi!:

V-ki:;.!,:

without overtime, on such days of arrival except
that if passengers ai'e on board, all members of the
Stewards' Department shall woik their regular sea
schedule of hours without the payment of overtime;
provided, however, that no maintenance or repair
work shall be performed on Saturday afternoons,
Sundays or holidays of such days of arrival without
payment of overtime, and provided further, that aU
work performed by Deck or Engine personnel in
excess of regular eight hours and all work perform­
ed in excess of regular hours of duty in Stewards*
Department, shall be paid for at the regular ov^time rate.

l|

^ il

�m
&gt;age Four

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Dushane's Report On Washingfton

Friday, December 10, 1943

SEAFARERS LOG

contain no clause regard blowing smoke up their member­
he is a member. Made ieveral
Published by the
decisions on SIU cases. Know ing a medical examination, and ship alley. They now have
fhc membership wishes him luck I am of the opinion that this is case before the National War La­
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
a matter for them to take up bor Board. It is a request to the
in his new job.
OF NORTH AMERICA
with the operators, as it effects board that they be granted the
REPORT OF DECEMBER 8, 1943 the SUP agreement, when they same conditions that the SIUAtlantic and Gulf District
December 15th is the final wine supply men to the operators, and SUP are at present enjoying.
up to compute and file
your a third party determines whether
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor
Will close this with a little in­
amended income tax, if the tax a person dispatched to a vessel formation to our new members
was under estimated from the can be employed. This seems to who do not know me, and may
HARRY LUNDEBERG ------ Presideni
September 15th report made to be a violation of our agreements be misled into believing the Pil­
110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.
the Internal Revenue.
There is one way that this ot's bilge water. In the Fall of
Internal Revenue penalizes a move may possibly be beat, a nineteen hundred and thirty six
JOHN HAWK
- Secy-Treas,
person six per cent if they under brief submitted to the appropri­
P.
O.
Box
2f,
Station
P.,
New
York
City
was storekeeper on the S.S.
estimate their tax. If you can't ations committee in Congress Quirigia of the United Fruit
guess your tax within twenty may cut off the proposed revenue Company. This was the only
MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Rep.
per cent, you will have to fish that the WSA intends to pay the ship of that company that the
424 Sth Street, N. W., Washington, D.C.
out the penalty. Internal Rev­ Doctors for every examination. crew went out on strike in the
•
w
w
enue states that ignorance of the The WSA is now drafting an ap­ port of New York. Was out on
law excuses no person. Listing propriation for the coming year, the picket line all during the
Directory of Branches
the four catergories of persons maybe Congressmen will see the 1936-1937 strike. Shipped out as
BRANCH
ADDRESS
who must file on or before De­ light, and cut the money bags of Bos'un Mate on the S.S. Presi­
PHONE
cember 15, 1943.
^
BOwUng Green 9-3437
the WSA.
dent Garfield in April, 1937.
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
' .1 Anyone who expects to have
E.
R.
Wallace,
SIU
Agt.,
Gal­
BALTIMORE
(2&gt;......,I4
North
Gay
St
Calvert
4539
PILOT ATTACK
PHILADELPHIA. ...;.. .6 North 6th St.
Lombard 7651
during the calendar year 1943
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
The December 3rd issue of the veston: Your Congressman may
more than $100 gross income
NEW ORLEANS (16) ..309 Chartres St
...Canal 3336
Pilot carried an editorial, in send you the Congressional Rec­
S^AVANNAH
218 Eaet Bay St
Savannah 3-1728
from a source outside of wages
ord
free.
Subscriptions
may
be
TAMPA
.....423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
which yours truly was given a
MOBILE
55 .So. Conception St
Dial 2.l3Sa
which are subject to withholding
paragraph. Usually a blast in sent to the Superintendent of
PUERTO RICO.
45 Ponce da Icon....... .Puerto de TIerra
tax and who also expects suffici­
Documents,
Government
Print­
GALVESTON
219
20th
Street
Galveston
2-8043
the Pilot is not worth the time
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway... Ft. Lauderdale 1601
ent gross income to require filing
ing
Office,
Washington,
D.C.
(One
to c'^swer, especially when it
•W
W
V
an income tax return (S500 for a
dollar and fifty cents per month.
comes Tom Blacky Myers.
single person, $1,200 for a mar­
PUBLICATION OFFICE:
New England fishermen
are
This article carried the same
ried couple, or $624 for a married
still
out
on
strike
against
the
ROOM
213, 2 STONE STREET
old bunk about the SIU-SUP be­
person.)
ing a shipowners set-up, and that OPA's ceiling prices. Pat McNew York City
BOwIing Green 9-8346
2. Any single person expect­
we curry favors with them. The Hugh is in town trying to
•267
ing wages of more than $2,700
record shows that when the SIU straighten things out. Looks as
during the year.
members struck the Robin Line though Triggs of the OPA, who
3. Any married person or mar­
ships for an increase in War Risk formerly was a fish buyer is set
ried couple expecting individual­
Bonuses, officials of the NMU on letting the fish buyers con­
ly or together more than $3,500
dispatched a crew" for one of tinue to reap a harvest.
from wages during the year.
The NMU has been pressing
these vessels, and they sailed her
4. Any person who was re­
the
WSA to get me to go along
to South Africa and return.
quired to file an income tax re­
with
them to try and high pres­
The record also shows that
turn for 1942 and expects their
sure
Congressman Rampsbeck
when the NMU crews had some
wages in 1943 to be less than in
of their vessels tied up for an for action on unemployment in­
1942.
waterfront, it takes picket lines,
{Continued from Page 1)
increase in War bonuses, the surance for seamen. Advised the
I know its a headache, but I
officials of the NMU, upon re­ WSA that I would not walk WLB. The NMU is asking for it takes uncompromising opposi-'
Just thought that a reminder
turning from a conference ih across the street with the NMU wages and working rules which tion to the shipowners and all
may help to eliminate the pay­
Washington with officials of the skunks. Will contact Congress­ have been part of the SIU con that they stand for. The NMU
ment of a penalty.
propaganda machine serves the
Maritime Commission, sold their men on this bill with only AFL tracts for years.
representatives,
and
not
with
the
political ends of the Stalinist
membership -a bill of goods on
MEDICAL EXAMINATION
IN BLACK AND WHITE
NMU
representatives.
clique
which runS the union, but
the Maritime Commission's twen­
Admiral Marshall Dimock of ty-five per cent bonus.
it,
does
not serve the economic
Curran
and
Company
have
put
The
the WSA, has sent me a notifica­ SIU-SUP crews were then re­
on paper a lot of wild and loose needs of the membership—a fact
tion that another meeting is go­ ceiving thirty-three per cent War
charges against the SIU—slan­ they are rapidly coming to un­
ing to be held on December risk bonus.
derous, all of them. We don't in­ derstand.
Fifteenth, on further discussion
We don't intend to shadow box
tend to engage in an endless
Another gander at the record
. of the WSA proposed Medical shows that these vultures in the
with
Curran, we intend to place
campaign of character assassina­
HENRY RUSSELL QUIRK
in
printers'
ink an analysis of ouT^
exam.
tion (the Stalinists would win in
labor movement condemned the
Get in touch with your sister.
conditions
and his conditions.
Their second proposal also was SIU-SUP for striking ships for
such a fight anyway). What we
Jessie Poiriei, 428 Pleasant St.,
sent to me. In the first proposal, an increase in War Bonuses.
do propose is to put in black and The test of a union is what it
any seaman who was turned However, after the National Me­ Melrose.
white a detailed analysis of the does for its members. Let the
«
*
»
down by a Doctor could go to diation Board granted us a War
SIU and NMU contracts, and to seamen of all unions read the
LORIN F. HOUGHTON
the U.S. Public -Health service Bonus of eighty dollars a month,
show the rank and file members facts and judge for themselves.
Contact
Attorney Ranny Drap­ of the NMU just what sort of a
for a re-examination—Under the these misleaders of labor shout­
new proposal, "The case shall be ed to high heaven for stabiliza­ er, Bank of America Building, rooking they are receiving.
decided by the Public Health tion on bonuses. That, my friends Manrovia, California.
In this issue, on page two and
• • •
Service Officer who has been ap­ led up to the present Maritime
three, we have analyzed the
IRVING PAULSON
pointed as Port Medical Repre­ War Emergency Board. This
NMU, MCS and SIU Stewards
VINCENT COSTER: You have
Communicate
with Attorney Department contracts on freight 50 hours overtime coming from
sentative." At the last meeting board was advocated and pushed
the majority of the opinion was by the NMU, and it owes its Richard Cantor, 51 Chambers vessels. In future issues we shall the Bull Line. •
•
that in any examination for con- birth and present powers to Street, New York City.
break down the contracts as they
* * *
tegious disease all the Doctors them.
apply to other departments. We
R. H. TAURIN has overtime
MIKE DIKUN
should be from the U.S. Public
urge all seamen in all unions to coming from the Calmar Line.
The record also shows that the
Your
papers
and discharges study these breakdowns and to See patrolman Sheehan about if.
Health Service, and that they be NMU supplied crews to the Ex­
free from any entanglements port Line when another of their have been turned into the Phila­ understand what they mean. No
*
#
*
with the WSA.
amount of Curran bull will be
(CIO) affiliates, the MEBA, delphia hall.
R. McLAURIN has overtime
able to cover up the fact' that coming from the New York of­
The WSA moving into the pic­ struck the Export Line for an in­
the SIU leads the industry in fice of the Calmar Line.
ture and trying to compel sea­ crease in Bonus. The NMU was
winning conditions for the sea­
*
«
•
men to submit to a medical ex­ returned this favor by that com­
men.
amination, wherein the WSA pany, in that they were granted
Crew which paid off S.S. Alcoa
SS ROBIN DONCASTER $15.00
sets lip the standard for the exam. the same bonuses that the SIUVoyager
in Sept. 1943. has $10
PROPAGANDA NOT
SS WM. MERIDITH
This is contrary to the state­ SUP was then receiving.
ENOUGH
linen money coming. Collect 17
7.00
DECK DEPT
ment of policy signed between
This editorial goes on to state,
Battery Place, New York City.
the unions and the WSA. I am "As Far as the NMU is concern­ SS GEO.
Some NMU rank and fliers
»
»
»
7.00 will no doubt begin to wonder
WESTINGHOUSE
of the opinion that the standards ed, conditions which might be
The
logging
of
the
Steward's
to be set up is a matter for col­ acceptable to the SIU are cer­ O. VALLEY .:
5.00 why it is that their outfit, with
lective bargaining under the tainly not acceptable to the rank KEITH BRILL
4.00 all its high-power publicity and Department of the S.S. Daniel
terms of agreements held with and file of all seamens' unions."
4.00 propaganda departments, lags be­ Willard has been reversed by the
L. REAVES
the operators, and I feel that the I suppose they mean that the
hind the SIU so badly in win­
2.00 ning conditions aboard the ships. Commissioner after a lengthy
WSA is duly bound to respect conditions now enjoyed by the GEORGE BOOKS
2.00 It is because it takes more than trial. The men involved can colthe terms of the agreements re­ SIU-SUP, are not acceptable to R. W. JONES
garding the examination clause the NMU.
beat cct their extra meal money and
J. PAPA
2.00 publicity and propaganda to bea^
og refund from Calmar Line
in the Seafarers Atlantic and
If that is the case, then the of­
ncfA
the shipowners. It takes hone
G.ulf district. The SUP agree- ficials of the NMU are again
$48.00 and militant struggle on tJ^e Office.
TOTAL
*

Pilot Attack On SIU
Reveals Desperation

MONEY DUE

Honor Roll

r

v:; H; ?0|

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PILOT ATTACK ON SIU REVEALS DESPERATION OF CURRAN &amp; CO.&#13;
READ THESE FACTS AND THEN DECIDE WHICH ONE REALLY GETS CONDITIONS</text>
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m

ft

rf

OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
Vol. V.

NEW YORK. N. Y„ FRIDAY. DECEMBER 17. 1943

No. 37

Old Timers No. 1 Enemy pf Bureaucrats
*I

I

0om &amp;er

' '•!&gt;' '

UAP

,i-- -•

PANTS /

Government -Shipowner
Offensive Is Pressed
The Washington bureaucrats may be fighting the
Germans and Japanese (we'll give them the benefit of the
doubt), but they have a third enemy which is much closer
at hand and therefor claims more of their attention- -this
enemy is the old-time merchant seaman with a reco'-d o£
union militancy.

The WSA health examination^
proposals, the Gestapo-like hear­ old-timers with the green kids
ings held by the Coast Guard being graduated by the thousands
every time a seaman parts his from the RMO schools.
hair on the left side, the contin­
LATEST EXAMPLE
ual chiseling on union contracts
by the shipowners, all these are
There are literally hundreds of
but part of an employer-govern­ examples of this persecution of
ment offensive which has as its old-time militants, but here is the
goal the supplanting of militant latest which came to our atten­
tion, and which we repeat be- .
cause it is typical of what is go­
ing on in the industry.
Brother Hugh A. Drake first
went to sea 29 years ago. In
those 29 years he has sailed as
everything from Ordinary to
Second Mate. When the war
broke out he was working in a
shipyard
at $100 per week. He
The. Maritime Commission's
was
over
the draft age and there
new 4,000-ton "pocket Liberty
was
no
reason
for him to leave
ship," consti'uction of which will
begin shortly, will be adaptable the safe berth in the shipyard,
to war services and wiU appar­ but somehow he wanted to be
ently be used chiefly to restock with his old shipmates during
the nation's "unbalanced" cargo this period of excitement and
fleet with the moderately small, danger.
shallow-draft vessels that will be
FOUGHT SUBS
required in the post-war period
for the coastal and short-sea
In April 1942 Brother Drake
trades.
signed on the SS Unico as Bos'un.
The new vessel, identified by He fought torpedoes and Atlan­
the commission as the "Cl-M- tic storms for eight months, ar­
AVl," is a single-screw Diesel riving back in Mobile in Novem­
powered motor ship 320 feet in ber. Upon signing off he waslength. It will be powered either picked up by the Coast Guard Ott
with a six-cylinder Nordberg or the charge of being intoxicated
with a Busch-Sulzer eight-cylin­ while aboard the ship. He re­
ITF—After, several years of der engine, the horsepower in ceived the old brass hat razzle
existence in exile, with head­ either case being 1,750 and the dazzle and his papers were lifted.
quarters in London, the French speed about twelve knots, which
The charge against him was a
Seamen's Union has transferred makes is slightly faster than the frame-up. The frame-up was so
its headquarters to Algiers, it j Liberty.
raw that when the skipper of the
was learned today at the New
The heavy damage done to Unico heard about it he sent a
York Office of the International many of the major ports of Eu­ special letter of protest to the
Transport Workers' Federation, rope may make it impossible for Coast Guard, saying that Drake
of which the French Seamen's large ships to dock there for had not been intoxicated and
Union is an affiliate. The cabled some considerable period after that he performed his duties ta
report from London also states the war, and it follows that the his (the skipper's) complete sat­
that the French seamen in North nation that will get the business isfaction.
Africa are almost 100 percent or­ will be the one having smaller
Faced with the skipper's letter
ganized.
vessels able to visit the compar­ the Coast Guard could do little
Branches of the French sea­ atively u n damaged secondary but return Drake's papers—^un­
men's Union have sprung up dur­ ports and the deck machinery re­ stamped. That is, there was no
official blackinark against hinj
ing the pa.st several years, in quired to service them.
The new vessel appears in pro­ and he was (supposedly) inno­
whatever ports French ships
found themselves. Almost imme­ file to be a cross between a col­ cent of any crime against God
diately after North Africa was lier and a large barge, with the and country. Yeah? But wait!
freed from the clutches of Vichy entire superstructure set aft, like
A BOMB THROWER?
and Vichy's anti-union laws, the a tanker's. Access to three large
cargo
holds,
extending
from
the
French seamen reorganized their
Drake then shipped out aft
union. The union will be greatly engine room to the bow, is pro­ Bos'un on August 15, 1943. Hi#
strengthened now that these vided by three equally large ship hit Puerto Rico three months
branches are pulled together hatches. The Diesel engines, later and a brass hat comes
within one union whose head­ weighing 130 tons, take up more aboard to see how he had been'
quarters is in the same place as space and account for more behaving himself. Up until the
the seat of the French Govern­ weight proportionally than those
of the Liberty ship.
{Continued on Page 4)
ment.

New Pocket
Liberty
Ships

FISHERMEN STILL ON STRIKE;
O.P.A. MAKES COUNTER OFFER
The strike for a living wage being conducted by the
Atlantic Fishermen's Union, SIU, entered its third week
today with little prospect of any immediate settlement.
The Fishermen are demanding that the OPA raise the whole­
sale price of certain fish in order to give the men sufficient
income to meet the rising cost of^
of lemon sole to 16 cents a
living. The .union has also charg­ price
pound and of sea scallops to 38
ed that reductions in fish prices cents a pound for the winter in

at ex-vessel level which went in­
to effect last July had not been
passed on to the consumer—rath­
er did the middle men absorb
this extra profit at the .expense
of the fishermen.

addition to the seven-cent in­
crease in the price of pollock for
December already authorized.

(3) Wholesale mark-ups will be
revised to prevent the obtaining
of unwarranted multiple margins
The strike, which affects all
and to reduce wholesale margins
vessels operating out of Boston
in port cities which are out of
and New Bedford and draggers
line with 1942 levels.
operating from New York, has
cost about 1,000,000 pounds of
(4) A New England fisheries
fish a day.
committee will be appointed by
OPA's Boston regional office
The OPA rejected the request
from the whole industry. The
of the striking fishermen
for a
committee will discuss the best
temporary suspension of price
solution for the present two-price
ceilings on cod, haddock, black
system for black backs and yel­
backs and yellow tails. Instead
low tails, and the problem of port
it promised to do these things:
differentials and re - examine
(1) To establish dollars-and- wholesale margins at all levels
cents retail prices for most East­ for both port and interior points.
ern species of fish in Easter cities
• which have community dollarsand-cents ceilings for groceries.
(2) To increase the ex-vessel

Keep In Touch With
Your Draft Board

French Seamen Set
Up Union H.Q.

I
if;

m
K\

�I'rir

*•

—

THE

Page Two

SE A FA H ER S

LOG

rfJfPORTOrV.

SEAFARERS LOG
FuUisbed by the

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
AOantk and Gislf District
Affiliated uHh the American Federation of Labor

HARRY LUNUEBERG

------ Vreiident

110 Mirkec Street, San Francisco, Odif.
•T!

JOHN HAWK

Secy-Treas.

p. O. Boi 25, Station P., New York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Rep»
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ADDRESS

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I IS

It^.

j:',
''

267

Ector's Mail Bag
THE MEN OF
Editor,
THE
MERCHANT
MARINE
Dear Sir:
My son James has been in the All the credit goes to the Navy,
merchant marine for the past 18
A lot to the Army, too
months and he likes it quite well. But a bit should be spread for
He has been to several foreign
some other boys
counti'ies of which he use to hear
In their coats of navy blue.
and study about in his geography
in school. James was telling his I don't mecin the Navy
Nor the Army with its sheen,
sister and me all about these
countries. They must be wonder­ I mean those other sailors
ful countries because his stories Called "The Men of the Mer­
chant Marine."
were vei-y interesting.
James is home for a few days, Without those brave and daring
men
thank God and I, his mother, can
really get some rest without Supplies would never be seen;
having to worry whether he's Because our defenses depend a
lot
torpedoed, lost or missing in ac­
On "The Men of the Merchant
tion.
Marine."
Please don't think me conspi­
cuous when I say James has been As they ride the high and rolling
a darn good son to me, and a
seas
wonderful brother to his 3 No danger from them is
younger sisters and little brother.
screened.
These youngsters love their big So now I end this poem with
brother, believe me.
God bless the Merchant Marine.
Enclose you will find a poem
—DORTHY M. SEEDS
composed and written by my
• * *
oldest daughter, Dorothy, age 18,
Editor,
for her brother James ' Of the
Dear Sir:
Merchant Marine,"
We are fully aware of the ob­
I have another son in the
army. He is Staff Sgt. Robert ject of this medical bill in Wash­
Seeds, somewhere in the U.S.A. ington, and we know that swivel
chair kings who have nothing to
James read Dorothy's poem do merely take a puff of their
and told me to .send it to you. cigar and say, "Well, what can
That's how I happen to get your we do to the .seamen this week?
address.
It seems the Maritime boys are
I hope you like Dot's poem as having troublfe shipping; so, why
much as we do. Writing poems not pass a bill that all seamen,
is one of my daughter's hobbies. even those crazy from making
She has a book full of poems the Russian run, must pass an
she's composed herself.
examination as stiff as the one
Again we all say and can nev- these lads have to pass to enlist
-©r say it too often: ''God bless in the training schools? Yes, let's
get to work on it. After all,
the Merchant Marine."
these old salts must move aside
I remain,
for our young boys, and why
Yours truly,
should we worry? We don't have
Mrs. MADELINE SEEDS, to worry about the North Atlan­
Silver Run Road;
tic, or wonder if the streamlined
Mellville, New Jersey
Liberty ship will come apart.
RED 1—Box 600
We've never been to sea, so what

"'-"Ti
•?.'

la 1
Friday, December 17. 1943

^^ASHII\GTOIV
• Bv MA-rT44ew DUSUAME-* '
O. Banks, SIU Agt., Mobile- During the week I attended a Several suggested changed
Crew members in making allot­ meeting called by the WSA re­ were recommended by the diff­
ments were always entitled to garding its "Proposed Seamen's erent maritime union represen­
allot part of their bonus. The, War Saving Plan." Under this tatives. These are now under
bonus rate allowed for this pur­ plan seamen could make volun­ consideration. When the final
pose was the lowest rate of bonus tary allotments to themselves draft is completed, they wiU be
paid. At present there are two during the war, and the Treasury sent to all branches of maritime
bonus rates, 100% and 40%. Al­ Department would pay three per unions for action thereon by the
lotments can be made on the cent intere-st on all savings. The rank and file.
40% bonus rate.
postal savings pay two percent
This proposed savings plan
interest,
and the average bank looks to me like a good pi'oposlSince the twenty percent with­
holding tax has been in effect pays one per" cent interest on all tion for any seamen who would
like to have a few bucks stacked
the U.S. Coast Guard has issued savings accounts.
instructions to all shipping com­ Seamen may name any person aside for any emergencies after
missioners on this matter, which that they wish to be the benefi­ the war. All savings accounts
ciary. It was recommended that will be governed by Treasury
reads:
Headquarters is in receipt of the WSA notify a person who Department regulations. If the
a lelter from Ihe Senior Mer­ has been named as the benefici- recommendations are adopted,
chant Marine Inspector (per­ 'ary. No savings shall be subject there will not be any strings or
sonnel) at New York dated 19 to liens, attachments, or any red tape attached to the savings
plan.
June, 1943 (file allotments) other legal process.
asking if the withholding lax
authorized in Public Law 6878th Congress should be de­
ducted before permitting a sea­
VINCENT COSTER: You have
man to allot the maximum HERCEL, KOHLER, DOYLE
amount under the regulations and TRIANO; You were acling 50 hours overtime coming from
now in effect.
AB's on the S.S. Marina but sign­ the Bull Line.
» » »
Under the regulation in ef­ ed off with OS pay. You have ihe
R.
H.
TAURIN
has overtime
fect at this time a seaman may
difference
in
wages
coming
from
coming
from
the
Calmar
Line,
allot up to 90 per centum of
See
patrolman
Sheehan
cibout
it.
the
Bull
Line
Office,
115
Broad
his regular wages plus the low
a
It»
bonus as provided for under St., New York City.
*
«
a
R. McLAURIN has overtime
Decision 2A of the Maritime
War Emergency Board. For .J. Smardjic: You have $3.60 coming from the New York ofi*
example, a seaman who signs overtime coming from the Bull fice of the Calmar Line.
on at $100 a month is being
allowed to make a maximum Line.
* » »
allotment at current low bonus
H.
MERKHEIMER:
You have
of 90 per centum of $140 or
12
hours
overtime
coming
from
$126 per month.
the Waterman Line.
Inasmuch as the difference
a • •
CARL ERIC FALK
in these two amounts is only
JOHN
WHITE
and JAMES
$14 a month which would be
Get in touch with your wife.
inadequate to cover the vari­ LINDSAY: You have overtime
Her address is 35 N.W. 6th Ave«
ous authorized deductions in­ coming from your trip on the S.S.
iienry
Lamb.
Collect
Bull
Line.
Apt.
No. 1, Miami, Fla.
cluding the withholding tax,
the allotments made by seamen
on or after July 1st ,1943
when ihe new lax law becomes
effective should not exceed 90
per centum of their regular
wages and the low bonus after
allowing for a deduction of 20
per centum to cover the with­
holding tax.
In other words, under the
above example 20 per centum
of $140 would be $28 leaving a
balance of $112, of which 90
per centum may be alloted or
$100.80—"
The WSA has advised all its
agents to instruct Masters of ves­
sels, to make certain that after
allotments, advarfces, slops, etc.,
that there will be sufficient
money to the seamen's credit at
the termination of the, articles to
cover all the necessary deduc­
tions, such as old age benefit
taxes—social security and with­
holding lax.

MONEY DUE

'eAMovutls

do wc care? Yes, let's get to
work at once."
A few of us are. familiar with
Act Three, Scene One, Hamlet:—
To Be or not to be,—that is the
question:—^Whether 'tis nobler in
the mind to' suffer the slings and
arrows of outrageous fortune, or
to take arms against a sea of
troubles, and. by opposing end
them.
What shall we do? Take arms
against a sea- of troubles and by
opposing end them?
ERIC IVIE UPCHURCH
Book No. 24611

"My maid asked for a raise foday. But I told her it would
cause inflation."

�Friday, December 17, 1943

THE

SEAFARERS

I.QC
Pago Threo

SAVANNAH

SS

WHArs Donra

catches his ships wherever they
happen to- dock or anchor. In
Shipping in this port is picking
this way the 90 miles of dock
up some what. Am going to need
area
plus the entire Hampton
crews for 3 new ships in the next
Roads anchorage area is com­
couple of weeks. Now would be
pletely covered. Remember that
a good time for any of you oldfigures show that every ship in
times who would like to come
the world can be at safe dock or
down here for a little vacation
Pol Dome issue was insignificant concession that they are request
anchorage
simultaneously in this
before shipping out to do so.
farce, then I don't know what it port.
you get down here now and get compared to the WSA squander­ ing on these groimds.
is. In the face of six years func­
Beefs, both phony and genuine,
on the shipping list you will find ing of people's money. The later
Now if these stooges think tha tioning, they stiU have to ask
have
billions
to
play
politics
with.
are
coming in on every sliip. A
that you won't have any trouble
the pirates that call themselves the shipowners to give them the
Dohaney
dickered
in
mere
mil­
few
of them have to be referred
shipping out when the time
shipowners, who wrap themselves
lions, the piker. The only dif­ up in the American flag during conditions that other maritime to headquarters but most are
comes.
unions are receiving. Their claim­
fShipped a full crew this last ference is that the people are the war time for the purpose of ing to have the leading union in settled on the spot. The usual
week for a new Liberty for South fall guys in this WSA case.
chiseling on the seamen, are go the industry is the biggest joke beefs relative to work being done
It all sums up to one thing, ing to give any concessions on that yours truly has ever heard by soldier passengers and prison­
Atlantic. Had to use a few WSA
ers have been ironed out fairly
and that is that the union can do the record of "NO STRIKE about.
men on this one but the last
well here with most claimed
out of here carried a full crew o it and the WSA- can't. Dispite PLEDGE," then they have anOLDEN BANKS, Agenl overtime being paid.
the
antagonism
shown
us
by
old-timers. If some of you old
other think coming.
timers will come down to take WSA we still are able to man
Atwood only has to give one
Now brother, just feature any
NORFOLK
these jobs that I'm expecting ou the ships with capable and effici­ Union demanding or requesting
loud shout over the telephone
in the next couple of weeks, we ent men whereas the men sup­ concessions from the shipowners,
and fresh milk and turkeys ap­
won't have to call the WSA for plied? by WSA invaribly turn out which is the most vicious em
The blacklist showed its face pear as if by magic.
any men to help man these ships to b€K as green as a new born ploying element in the whole again, in Norfolk via the Martin
The miracle of miracles has
Don't have much news to re­ babe, until they are taught by world, and basing their conten­ Marine Transportation Company finally happened and Norfolk
port -from this port as we don't our men aboard their ships. Fur­ tions on the record that they which operates tow-boats under held a regular meeting with
have very many men on the ther, we maintain that there have lived up to their no strike agreement with the SIU. A coal thirty-one full book members
beach at one' time here any more never would have been any pledge since the Nazies raided burning fireman dispatched from plus almost an equal amount of
the hall was refused by the Cap­ probationary members. Also the
About the only news I can senc shortage of seamen of any rat­ Russia! This same element
to the LOG is to report the new ings if the people had let the claiming that the old officials of tain and Chief .Engineer of the boys seem to be finally realizing
ships that are coming out down union carry out this very vital the International Seamens' Union Eui-eka on the grounds that he that this is the best shipping port
''here so that the members can responsibility towards the war were so reactionary that they was a "trouble maker," and then in the country and we are now
able to man ships with a mini­
keep in touch with how shipping effort, and if the WSA had not had to form this NMU to save the trouble started.
mum
of the uniformed progeny
is in this port. Things look good blocked the unions' efft)rts tow­ the poor seamen from slavery
The dispatcher immediately reof
the
WSA.
for the coming couple of weeks ard this end.
These stooges makes them look dispatched him and the company
For
the
good
of
the
country,
Among
the battered faces of
was
informed
that
the
union
was
like a bunch of pikers.
CHARLES WAID, Agent
the
old-timers
recently arrived in
seamen, and people this outfit
prepared
to
carry
the
case
Now my dear brothers, I will
caUed the RMO of the WSA just take a few questions and through the whole governmental Norfolk are those of William
BALTIMORE
should be either aboli.shed or answers from the Pilot of the alphabet from the WSA and "Curly" Rentz, and "Red" Lofcleaned out entirely, as the pres­ same issue.
NLRB clear to the White House ley. A group of eight refugees
When the local membership at ent set-up is definately hindering
from "monkey wrench corner"
if necessary.
"McKenzie; Will you pay over­
Baltimore was informed of the the war effort.
arrived simultaneously yesterday
time for Saturday afternoons in The result was that this black­ and immediately shipped out to­
RMO upgrading program, the
JOSEPH FLANAGAN, Agent port, Sundays and holidays as listed fireman. Brother Fred D.
general reaction was that the
Bullock, is no longer on the gether on a Mississippi Shipping
specifled in the contract?
Union was fully capable and able
Company rust bucket.
"Taylor: It must be interpret­ blacklist but instead is wielding Agent Rogers has" taken over
MOBILE
to give this service to its mem­
a slice bar somewhere between
ed.
bers gratis. Yes, Brothers, with­
with a bang assisted by a new
here and Philly.
Last week, in a practical way, "McKenzie: Will you pay over­
out a red cent for red tape, or a
bunch of patrolmen. The beach
Agent Rogers has served no­ situation is good with plenty of
nickel cost to the people or Gov­ yours truly tried to give you the time for work performed
tice on all tow-boat operators jobs available and the beer sup­
ernment. We proceeded to give definition of the NMU. After watches stood after 8 hours
that the "family boat" .days are ply holding out. Live ones are
p6rt?
our membership just such ser­ ooking through this masterpiece
over.
"Taylor:
The
committee
for
vice, also any one else who cared of hooey published by one Leo
as common as collection cans at
There is a shortage of coal a NMU meeting and the beach is
to was welcome to this service. Huberman for the educational the shipowners hold that they
No elaborate school system was committee of the NMU, I will try have been carrying out those pro­ burning firemen, both white and so prosperous that beachcombers
set up, and no high paid specialist and define the second phrase, visions according to their inter­ colox-ed in this port and jobs are piece off leading citizens.
available for any who want
pretations of the contract.
was hired. The tutors were vol­ "the NMU, What It Does."
—Norfolk Reporter
them.
This case shows these men
"McKenzie:
Will
you
agree
to
unteers who understood seaman­
Now the NMU is a front or­
ship and engine-room practice. ganization in the maritime indus­ pay the settlement which MAY that the union is behind them
GALVESTON
The results would be called try for the unlicensed personnel finally be reached on these two 100% and doesn't intend to take
any
monkey
business.
points
retroactively
back
to
the
amazing by the WSA super- on ships. It has been function­
Things have not been so hot in
duper instructors, but to us they ing for the past six years, and date on which the War Shipping The port here has a big job to
the
past week, but rest assured
Administration
guaranteed
the
handle
with
ships
coming
in
con­
T iwere ^erely what we expected. the best that they can boast of
that
Bro. Parker's Flagship, the
collective
bargaining
agreements
stantly,
many
merely
making
!i
In less than six weeks' time n the form of agreements for
Brandywine,
is now rid of the
with
the
companies
and
the
this
a
topping
off
or
stop-over
niore than 150 members and their members is mediocre. In
NMU
finks
that
were so hard to
NMU?
point
enroute.
There
are
ninety
others wei-e upgraded through fact, you can't terrn them any
get
off.
After
we
won the elec­
"Taylor:
The
committee
for
the
miles
of
dock
area
from
Lynour system, and further it took thing else but company contracts.
tion
had
a
few
more
boys come
companies
cannot
agree
to
pay
laven to Berkley back around
from two hom-s in most cases, to As compared to the agreements
in
and
turn
in
their
NMU
books.
any
thing
retroactive
that
is
Portsmouth and up to Berkley
no more than two days for the that the Seafarers International
So here is the "Last Will and
against
their
interpretation
of
the
and
Point
Comfort.
To
cover
tutoring course which enabled Union has secured for their
his area Patrolman Tucker has Testament of Joe Curran, Komthese men to obtain- ratings any members there is no comparison. contract."
And then the Negotiating Com­ been assigned to Newport News rade president deluxe of the
where from AB to Junior En­ Now I am basing my conten­
NMU."—Dated very soon:
gineer and in some cases the men tions on what I have seen print­ mittee reported to members of with Patrolman Martin being
"I Joe Curran being of unsound
the
NMU
that
this
is
a
victory
responsible
for
the
immediate
decided to go the whole hog and ed in the NMU Pilot. Oct. 8, 1943.
mind and in misery, and consid­
for
the
union.
And
this
is
the
Norfolk
Area.
Agent
Rogers
get engineers or mates licenses. The negotiating committee ap­
ering the possability of a fatal
Wliat did llris cost the union? pealed to these companies for same element that claims that pinch-hits over the entire area
colapse
through the rank and file
the
old
officials
of
the
Interna­
assisted by Brother Atwood, the
Brothers read carefully, $3.00, equal pay for equal work. Now
tional Seamens' Union were so Dispatcher-Patrolman and a spe­ of the NMU, also known as the
three big dollars for books. SH— what is the equal pay for equal
reactionary that they had to cial Patrolman covers the harbor- end of me, declared this to be
quiet please.
work that this negotiating com­ form the National Maritime craft, tow-boats and ferries. my last will and testament. To
We contrast the above with the mittee is talking about? This is Union! If this assertion is not a Brother Wilson, SUP Patrolman,
{Continued on Page 4)
WSA provisions for same up­ the whole thing in a nut shell:
grading program. To start' with, they are asking the shipowners
they allow thirty days for any for overtime for dumping gar­
rating. It cost the people around bage which is sometliing that tlie
$300.00 per man. It aisp costs the SIU had in their agreements be­
people large sums for schools and fore Pearl Harbor. Also overtime
high paid instructors who, more for work after 5 p.m. and before
than likely, never have been 8 a.m. in port, which all other
aboard a ship, and is some poli­ maritime unions had before
tician's friend, or maybe an in­ Pearl Harbor. Now this negoti­
law or relative of some WSA ating committee is asking the
big shot, and' wouldn't know the shipowners for the same thing,
differance between a piece of two years after thia_country en­
marlin and a nut. There you have tered the war, and the only thing
an idea of the squandering or­ that Joe Gurran can holler
gies indulged in by the WSAj not about in the same issue of the
to mention the $2,000 per man it Pilot is their record of the "NO
-ijicost' to send so-called trained kids STRIKE PLEDGE." Which
on ships taught by just such kind means, in a few words that the
of instructors as mentioned shipowners should give the
above., Yes, Brothers, the Tea NMU negotiating committee the

Around the Ports

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FA/tMK'S Pff/C£S COmffAT/OAfPJWF/TS

OCTOeSR

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UP1336

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I

Pags Four

Government -Shipowner
Offensive Is Pressed
{Confinwd from Page 1)
time the brass hat appeared,
Drake got along with the skipper
OK, but immediately afterwards
the skipper began to ride him,
A wartime savings plan, where­
thinking that he must be some
by
merchant seamen would be
sort of a bomb thrower if the
assured
of a steady income dur­
Coast Guard had to go around
ing
the
slack
period immediately
checking up on him in every
following
the
close
of the war, is
poi-t.
It now appears that for the being worked out by the War
rest of the war (and God knows Shipping Administration, the
~ how long afterwards) Drake is Tx-easury and labor unions.
The plan was presented to
going to be hounded by the Coast
union
leaders by the War Ship­
Guard at each port. His reputaping
Administration
during the
.tion will be smeared with each
course
of
an
executive
conference
skipper he sails under, and his
designed
to
get
laboi-'s
reaction
slightest violation of some regu­
to
the
program.
The
extent
to
lation will probably be cause for
a prompt jerking around by some which the pi'oposed plan will be
90-day wonder covered with put into effect, WSA officials
said, is dependent upon the at­
brass.
titude of the maritime trade
CASE TYPICAL
unions, and will only become ef­
fective if regarded as necessary
We sight Drake's case because
and desirable by them.
it is typical of the treatment giv­
.Subject to the satisfactory
en hundreds of other old-time
completion of details and final
seamen whose only crime is that
agx-eement, it is pioposed that
they are militant union men. This
the WSA and the Tx-easury De­
campaign against them is design­
partment sponsor a savings plan
ed as a "softening up" tactic; it is
for seamen, including both li­
meant to demoralize the leading
censed and unlicensed personnel.
elements in the unions and thus
Seamen, WSA officials said,
weaken organized labor prepar­
would be encoui-aged to make
atory for the final assault upon it
voluntax-y allotments for the dur­
after the war* ends.
ation of the war, of such portions
of their earnings as may be avail­
able for savings after provisions
for other allotments such as tax­
es, etc. Withdrawals would be
held in a fund by the United
States Ti-easury, subject to the
payment of interest at approx­
It was a rotten night and cold. imately 3 per cent. Funds al­
The Liberty Ship "Mulligan located to the savings account
Stew" was pitching and rolling could be obtained fi-om bonuses,
off one of the world's worst capes overtime or wages, or all three,
in a terrific sea. For days there WSA said.
had been neither sun nor stars
Withdrawals of deposits in the
with which to navigate. Further­ fund would be x-estricted, subject
more, a radio warning told of to some degree of flexibility
for
submarines in the offing. The of­ emei-gency needs, until after the
{Contimied from Page 3)
ficers were edgy. The crew war. At the conclusion of hostil­
strained every eye. Up in the ities, withdrawals would be per­ Russia and Mustache Joe, I leave
heavily aimrored and blacked-out mitted and provided for on the all of the faithful fellow travel­
wheelhouse, the bearded young basis of paynxents to an individ­
ers, button hole sevvexs, pants
helmsman inquired of the mate; ual seaman for the cux-rent year
pressers, Myer's, Stone, and the
"Where do you stand in the based upon the amounts deposit­ 13th Street Commandoes of the
ed by him within a given twelve­
draft. Sir?"
month period. In other words, if NMU. To France I leave all of
The mate, a family man, re­ a seaman has deposited funds in the beautiful madamoiselles in the
plied, laconically, "3-A."
1943, and the war ends in 1946, occupied NMU branches, and
&lt;"Well," said the helmsman, he could draw upon his account hdqts. I never was one fox- the
soberly, as the ship's nose dipped only to the extent of the amounts girls—whoops.
into a giant sea that washed he deposited in 1943. In 1947 his
"To England I leave the orig­
completely over the forv.'ard withdrawals would be limited to inal NMU agreement and plans
gun, "you ain't got nuthin' ,to the funds deposited in 1944.
to take over the seamen. But I
worry about. You're safe."
It is fui'ther proposed that ar­ will never forgive you for not
Somehow this true story is ty­ rangements be made whereby letting me ashore in Africa last
pical of the attitude of the aver­ the withdrawals by an individual summer. To Norway, I leave you
age American merchant seaman.- seaman would be divided into another quisling, Thos. ChristenHe'll fight.
But he'll weai- no monthly or quarterly payments. sen of the NMU, Pan-American
Under the tentative plan WSA Division. To President Roosevelt,
inan's collar. He loves to shock
people by saying he's at sea to will work out ax-rangements with I leave my apologies for trying
duck the draft. This attitude con­ its agents to facilitate pay roll to interx-upt his war duties by
fuses landlubbei's. Seamen are deductions, the agents to make flooding his office with screwball
boistex-ous, courageous, loyal, un­ the deduction fi-om the seaman's wires from NMU fellow travel­
disciplined, proud, defiant and wages at the time of paying off. ers. And to America, I leave you
breathtaking. But don't let them Amounts so deducted would be Walter Winchell, who always said
kid you. Most of them not only remitted to the Treasury Depart­ to hell with Curran and the
know their business but each one ment, all in accordance with reg- NMU. I know he will be very
feels that the ship couldn't move iilation.s agi-eed upon by the busy on my funeral day, so he
would not come, business before
two feet without him. That's Tx-easury and WSA.
For its part the Tx-easury De- pleasure. To the SIU, I leave 20
what they call morale.
pai-tment will hold the funds and by 10 gold framed pictures of
—PM
the interest thereon and will ad­ myself to hang in their union
minister them subject to regula­ halls to scare hell out of any
tions.
young seaman who might think
Disbursements to seamen along Commie lines, and to the
S. ROBIN LOCKSLEY .$10.00
would be made through the pos­ RMO, I leave you what is left of
FRANK OLEARY
5.00
tal savings system, subject to ar­ the fellow travelers in the NMU
rangements mutually agreeable to the Sailors Union of Pacific, I
to the system and the Tx-easury leave money for my tombstone,
Departmen*^.
with the following epitaph:

Tom O'Reilly
At Sea

Around The Ports Germans Reported

it

Honor Roll

ilm-'

r.

Keep In Touch With
Your Draft Board

[1

g.

,•

•

Enney, meeney miny moe.
Here lies Curran by the toe.
Underneath he seems to say.
You cannot beat the Old
SIU of NA.

Deserting Ships

(ITF) From the Swedish port
of Sundsvall, the report has
i-eached the International Transportworkers' Federation that itij
"And to the entire maritinxe woi-k- the middle of August, a German
ers, I just leave, and will they ship was held up due to the de­
sertion of its crew of eleven, of
thank God."
whom ten were aliens. The cap­
After making this will Joe
tain tried to sign on a Swedish
Lay down last night, was-too crew and offered 1,000 crowns
tired to wait.
for the journey without success.
Had a chill this morning, was
too tired to shake,
I sure was tired.
I'm tired of coffee, I'm tired of
tea.
The NMU, I built and love is
tired of me.
Oh, hell, I'm tired.
After this doctor crap put out
by the WSA the new Secretary
of the MM&amp;P, Capt. John Yordt
and the MERA backed us up 100
per cent, notifying all ports of
their action. The NMU is as .si­
lent as a church mouse about the
affair. They are only interested
in feathering their nest with the
USS and what have you. Any­
thing for the benefit of their
membership is out.

In Harnoesand a German ship
was detained for si.x days. Four
of its crew deserted en route and
another two upon reaching this
port. The entire crew of this
ship, including the Captain and
mate were alien and only the two
soliders serving the ship's gun
were German. Because they
could get no Swedish seaftien to
sail the vessel, they were forced
to take German seamen from an­
other ship in order to get the
ship back to Germany.

attend but they were not inter­
ested. The Longshoxemen of Lo­
cal 407, Galveston, held a meet­
ing Friday night, Dec. 3rd. Also
the Longshoremen of Texas City,
they will bring this WSA crap up
E. R. WALLACE. Agent and give us their backing.
»•
*
»
(The Galveston News gave
P.S.—
Brother Wallace's protest on the
After holding a joint meeting
proposed medical exams a 5-inch
with the Master Mates and Pil­ story on page one—-Editor).
ots, and the Marine Eng. Benificial Ass'n., we got on the front
page of the Galveston News. The
NMU Donkeys were invited to

Keep In Touch With
Your Draft Board

.

• -

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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
OLD TIMERS NO. 1 ENEMY OF BUREAUCRATS&#13;
NEW POCKET LIBERTY SHIPS&#13;
FISHERMEN STILL ON STRIKE; O.P.A. MAKES COUNTER OFFER&#13;
FRENCH SEAMEN SET UP UNION H.Q.&#13;
W.S.A. PROPOSED CREW SAVINGS&#13;
TOM O'REILLY AT SEA&#13;
GERMANS REPORTED DESERTING SHIPS</text>
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                    <text>-• - •

m0%m

SSSSSS&amp;u

V

.
rii

SECURITY
IN
UNITY
Vol. V.

OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' DTTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
NEW YORK, N,Y., FRIDAY. DECEMBER 24, 1943

.. Warmest..
SEASON'S GREETINGS
To All Seamen
And Their Friends
%
., from ..
SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
(Atlantic &amp; Gulf Dist.)

Relatives Praise Our
Gift Plans For SIU
Prisoners Of War
SIU plans for sending gifts to members of the union
. who are prisoners of war is meeting with enthusiastic
praise from these men's relatives. Sisters, wives and mothers
have written the union to tell us that a word from former
shipmates would probably do more for the morale of these
men than any other single act.
Norfolk, Virginia
Not only are the relatives high
Dec. 18, 1943
in their praise of this plan, but Seafarers International Union
are actively cooperating by sur­ Of North America
rendering to the union one of My dear Mr. Hawk,
their official prisoner of war
In answer to your letter of
shipping labels, without which Dec. 10th, f want to thank you
no package could be sent.
from the bottom of my heart for
Following are two letters just your kind thought of my son
received in H.Q. office which and I am sure a gift from the
show how the relatives feel.
(Continued on Page 4)

"We're Lucky the WLB Didn't Charge Us
Rent for This Peachy Air Raid Shelter"

Curran's Ghost Writer
Joins Lamentations On
SIU Stewards Contract
Joe Curran's ghost writer has now entered the lists to tilt at the Stewards De­
partment supplementary agreement recently signed by the SIU and its contracted com­
panies. In the column "Keep 'em Sailing," Curran's ghost writer charges that "the
Seafarers International Union is the instrument through which the companies are at­
tempting to destroy the gains made by the seamen in the rank and file unions, chiefly
the National Maritime Union."
file seaman's attention away from
The ghost then goes on to the glaring differences between NMU in winning conditions for
the seamen — this stewards de­
charge that under the new SIU the SIU and NMU contracts.
partment supplementary agree­
We have said before, and we ment being only the most recent
agreement, the stewards "are re­
turned to the position of practic­ repeat now, the test of a union example.
is what it gets for its members Curran's ghost can scream and
ally galley slaves."
in the way of wages and working
All this is part of the defensive conditions. Curran's ghost writer rattle the chains, but its not go­
ing to do Curran any good.
fireworks thrown up by the can scream that the new SIU Printed below is the full text of
NMU leaders in an effort to cov­ contract is a "sell out," but the the SIU supplementary agree­
er their failure to win for their fact remains that it is the best ment, and every NMU man that
members, conditions comparable stewards contract in the industry reads it will know immediately
to those of the SIU. By smearing for freight vessels carrying that it is better than anything
the SIU as a "shipowners agent," troops and military personnel. that Curran ever got out of the
they hope to divert the rank and The SIU has always lead the shipowners.

READ THIS CONTRACT-DECIDE FOR-YOURSELF
SUPPLEMENT AGREEMENT
— to —
AGREEMENT
between the

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
— and —
ALCOA STEAMSmP COMPANY, INC.
A. H. BULL STEAMSHIP COMPANY
BALTIMORE INSULAR LINE, INC.
EASTERN STEAMSHIP LINES, INC.
MISSISSIPPI SHIPPING CO., INC.
SEAS SHIPPING CO., INC.
SMITH &amp; JOHNSON
WATERMAN STEAMSHIP CORPORATION
AMERICAN RANGE-LIBERTY LINES, Inc.
SOUTH ATLANTIC STEAMSHIP LINES

I't:"

No. 38

Covering Increases in Manning Scale
or the
Payment of Additional Compensation On
Freighters When Carrying and Serving
(a) Augmented Gun Crews,
(b) Military Guards, Military Officials
and Other Persons Carried
As Passengers,
(c) Assignment of Troops.
1. When the crew including the Stewards
Department, Gun Crew and including Mil­
itary Officials and other persons carried and
served as passengers, total between 64 per­
sons and not more than 80 persons, a Galley
Utilityman will be carried in lieu of the
3d cook and one night cook and baker will
be added to the manning scale of the Stew­
ards Department. The wages for the night
cook and baker to be $120.00 Base Wage,
$17.50 Emergency Increase — $137.50 total
wage.
The night cook and baker added to the
personnel under such circumstances will be
required to perform the major portion of his
work during the night hours doing the nec­
essary cooking, baking bread, pies, cakes,
puddings, etc., in order to" take advantage
of the limited facilities of the gaUey and to
relieve the work of the day cooks as much
as possible.
—rUniled Mine Workers Journal i

:V

2. When accommodations are not avail­
able for carrying the additional night cook
and baker imder the conditions as set forth
in paragraph No. 1, then in lieu of carrying
the additional night cook and baker, two
(2) hours' overtime per day shall be paid to
each of the three (3) regular cooks for each
day such extra services are required to
serve the three (3) regular meals and per­
forming the ordinary work incidental to the
duties of the Stewards Department.
3. (a) When crew, including the Stew­
ards Department, Gun Crew, Military Offi­
cials and other persons carried and served
as passengers exceed 80 persons one (1)
hour's overtime per day for each day such
extra services are performed will be allowed
each of the regular day cooks up to a total
of 90 persons and an additional hour's over­
time for each of the day cooks per day such
work is performed will be allowed when the
number exceeds 90 and is not more than
100 persons.
(b) When the number of persons exclud­
ing enlisted military personnel, other than
Gun Crew and excluding prisoners, exceeds
100, no additional overtime shall be paid to
the regular day cooks as provided in para­
graph (a) above, but the following manning
scale khall be carried.
Manning Scsde Over 100 and
Not Exceeding 149 Persons.
Rating

Base
Pay

Emergency
Increase

Total

1 Steward
$140.00 $17.50 $157.50
1 Chief Cook
120.00 17.50 137.50
1 Night Cook and
Baker
120.00 17.50 137.50
1 Comb. 2d Cook
and Butcher
105.00 17.50 122.50
1 Second Cook
105.00 17.50 122.50
1 Galley Utility
70.00 17.50
87.50
1 Night Cook and
Bakers Utility
70.00 17.50
87.50
4 Messmen
70.00 17.50
87.50
2 Utility
70.00 17.50
87.50
1 Utility for each 12
persons over 100 .. 70.00 17.50
87.50
(Continued from Page 3)

J

;i I

[il

�'••a-

Page Two

f

THE

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District

sy

Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor

HARRY LUNDEBERG

1

------ President

110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

------- Secy'Treas,

P. O. Box 2 J, Station P., New York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Wasfdngton Rfp,
424 5th Street, N.
m

Washin^o, D. &amp;

Directory of Branches
BRANCH

ADDRESS

PHONE

NEW YORK (4)
2 Stono St
SOwUnB Green 9-3437
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Cay St.
Calvert 4539
PHILADELPHIA........6 North 6th St
Lombard 7651
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PL
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS ('J6) ..321 Chartres St
Canal 3336
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St
Savannah 3-1728
TAMPA..
423 East Platt St
Tampa MM-1323
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St.
Dial 2-1392
PUERTO RICO
45 Ponce de Leon
Puerto de Tiorra
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-8043
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway... Ft. Eauderdale 1601
WW*

1^-

PUBLICATION OFFICE;
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8344
~

267

AFL Demands High Wage
Standards And Shorter
Hours In Post War Era
Washington, D. C. — In two official pronouncements,
the American Federation of Labor served notice to the na­
tion that it will not stand for wage cuts when the war ends.
President William Green appearing before the Tru­
man Committee of the United States Senate, declared that
tiie economic safety of America^
Mr. Meany expressed a similar
requires shortening of working| point of view over tbe radio for­
bours in the p.ost-war period; um. He said:
without reduction of total earn-' "After the war ends, labor
wants good wages paid for the
ings.
work
that labor performs; and
Secretary - Treasurer George,
labor
also
wants the work-week
Meany, speaking
on the Ameri*
to be reduced sufficiently so as
can Forum of the Air, warned to give work to everyone who
that lowering of wage income seeks a job. In proposing the
and consequent curtailment of payment of high wages by indus­
purchasing power would .bring try after the war, labor is not
about a post-war depression.
thinking of itself alone but of the
employer
and the nation as a
Thus, a new and major post­
whole.
In
order to keep our fac­
war issue was projected into the
tories
running
steadily, the Am­
forefront of post-war discussion
erican
people
must
have the pur­
—an issue on which the Ameri­
chasing
power
to
buy
the prod­
can Federation of Labor is deter­
ucts
of
these
factories.
By this
mined to carry, on an aggressive
time
we
should
all
realize
that
campaign in behalf of the na­
low
wages
do
not
make
for
pros­
tion's workers.
perity in America. Wages were
In his testimony before the low during the depression and
Truman Committee, Mr. Green because wages were low purchaspointed out that by voluntarily asing power was low and the
offering their no-strike pledge to depression dragged on—^year af­
the Government for the duration ter year.
of the war and by acceding to "As to the second point: Labor
ilie economic stabilization pro­ feels that it is far better to have
gram, American workers have everyone working a, 35-hour or a
sacrificed their opportunities for
30-hour week when peace re­
economic advancement during
turns than to have some people
war-time. He added:
working 40 hours and millions of
"Workers have relied upon others not working at all. In the
working long hours to get income latter circumstances even those
to meet increased living costs. who are employed are apprehen­
While workers are denied the sive and tend .to hold on to their
right to increase wage rates to money instead of spending it for
accord with increased productiv­ the products that American in­
ity and employers' capacity to
dustry wants to manufacture and
pay, we shall endeavor to restore
equity by insisting that peace­ sell, and which must be kept
time hours standards shall be es­ tnqving into the hands of the
tablished without reductions in cqnsiimers if the post-war era is
earnings.
to be an era of prosperity."

ii

-

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, December 24, 1943

fRtPOUT OI\
^ASHirVGTOIV
• BV MATFHIW DuSHANt* '

MEDICAL EXAMINATION:
parments that would disqualify a sured prepared statements, and
seaman.
In the above proposal it their mock phrases of the won­
Meeting on proposed medical
can
readily
be seen that they derful job that the seamen are
examination was again held on
have
thrown
the
book at the sea­ doing.
December 15th. Representatives
man,
and
could
disqualify any These pseudo guardians of
from the following maritime
seanian
that
a
company
doctor seamen's rights, health and safe­
unions attended: SUP- SIU,
wished
to
blackball.
ty, were no where to be seen
MM&amp;P, MEBA, MC&amp;S, MFOW,
when
the seamen were not otThe
proposed
standard
furth­
NMU, and ACA. There were
er
states,
"If
must
be
assumed
ganized
into unions. They now
some representatives of the em­
ployers also there, a peep was tilKaf the ability of an exparwneed have branched out all over the
heard from the Export Line saw­ officer ox seaman to suceassfully world under the banner of the
bones. At the last meeting a pursue 3iis vocation, as indicated United Seamen's Service, a b^statement was made that this by repeated voyages, is prhna tard organization of the Wijr
character would turn seamen facie evidence of the api^licants Shipping Administration and.
down for having bum teeth, but ability io continue in the indvui- controlled by them. And togeth­
he has a brother who is a den­ itfy. unless disquMifying disease er these two organization arc
tist and if you went to his ax condition has ariseta since the now professing that they are the
brother for treatment, .the Export bwt C&lt;mt Gwu^d examination for people who are to look after sea­
men's welfare.
Line Doctor would OK the sea­ license or certifieate."
man. Usual .denials by the Doc^, T^?.ere you have the clause th^ There were approximately
but he stated that he did recom­ could ..disqualify any pierson who 115,000 seamen in the o&amp;shore
mend Doctors to seamen who has been gpinS ^ sea for a num­ and coastwise trade in the mari­
would take care of their wives if ber of years, ^d who through time UKiustry IWSA figures as of
they were going to have a fu­ the terrible conditions imder September 1. 1949). and the WSA
ture Bosun.
which a sesnnan is compelled to proposes to pay the examining
make
a living. The lack of fresh Doctor Two Dollars per head for
Captain Edward Macauley,
milk
being supplied on board every seaman that is examined.
WSA Deputy, started the meet­
vessel,
which causes decay of The minimum that was proposed
ing off by reading a prepared
teeth
by
a small supply of cal­ by a group of doctors in a meet-^
statement, in which he stated
that it is not the intent of the cium. Ukers of the stomach ing held in New York on April
WSA to use the examinRtior^ to through rotten garbage that 16th, 1942, was Fifteen Dollars, A
eliminate old timers from the crews are fed, which is given the ship the size of the Mariposa,
industry, and that the purppse of misnomer of food. Polluted water that carries hundreds of men,
this examination was to safe­ being brought on board a vessel could make about ten trips a
guard the safety and health ^f for drinking purposes by com­ year to England and return. A
panies who are intent on saving rough estimate of what the com­
the crew.
a few dollars. Ail the thousand pany would receive for their doc­
Marshall Dimoek then quoted and one other ^uses that sea­ tor's examining the crews would
telegrams that Admiral- Land has men are subjected to by some be about twelve hundred dollars,
sent to unions who have protest­ companies, which have proven to or one hundred and twenty thou­
ed that they feel the examination lower a seaman's standards. No sand dollars per year. I am of
would be used as a blackball proposals were made to correct the opinion that no records can
system by company doctors. the causes that bring on the con­ be produced by any company
Land's telegrams also stated that ditions that would disqualify the that will show that it cost them
these examinations would not be seaman. A verbal statement was that much in any one year io
used to blackball and eliminate made that the overhaul program examine the crews of their ves­
old-timers and militant seamen
was intended to try and correct sels.
from the industry.
some of the causes that would Every union representative
It would seem that from the lead up to a disqualification.
that attended the meeting has
statements made by Macauley
gone
on record that their organi­
and Land that they are taking a A person coming into the mar­ zation is opposed to the proposed
very deep interest in the safety itime industry is throughly ex­ standard for medical examina­
and health of the crews, and amined by a doctor, ami before tion, that was submitted at that
that at last the seamen have given a certifieate by the govern­ meeting.
found some officials of govern­ ment which qualifies him to.
Mr. Dimoek stated that there
ment agencies who are going to make a living in the industry, he
will
be no more meetings held,
look after their interest, and phy­ must be in good idiysical condi­ and that beginning on the first of
tion. It is now proposed that af­
sical well being.
ter a person has spent the great­ the year the WSA will go ahead
However, in the new proposal est part of his life in that indus­ with the examination but that
that was submitted does not bear try, and through usual industrial the proposals that were submit­
out the statements that were diseases and other ailments pe­ ted will be modified.
made by Macauley, and Dimoek. culiar to the iniiustry, the WSA Brother- John Hawk and the
WSA Medical circular No. 3 intends to disqualify that per­ SUP business agent from Nor­
stated, "The competency or in­ son because he cannot pass the folk attended this meeting. This
competency of any licensed o£B- original examination that he was an educational meeting for
cer or certified seaman for duty, passed on coming into the indus­ our SUP business agent, it is too
will be judged on the standards try.
bad that the rank and file do not
described in U.S. Coast Guard
No pension system is proposed have the time to attend some of
Navigation and Vessel Inspection
by the WSA which would take these WSA three ring circuses
Circular No. 26, which defines care of any person who would be that they call a meeting, it would
the degree of defective vision ai^ disqualified. These people who enlighten them as to the meth­
color sense thai are acceptaUe make statements to the press and ods and tactics that these people
and lists as disqualifying epil­ to union representatives that adopt in trying to shakle seamen
epsy. insanity, acute veneral di­ they do not intend to eliminate with chatos, and then gloriously
sease, neurosyphilis, badly im­ old-timers and others from the praise the seamen in their press
paired hearing, or other defo.cts industry, and that they need the releases.
that would render the applicant services of these old-timers, bold­
incompetent tp perform the or­ ly submit a proposal which is
Keep In Touch With
dinary duties required of him at contrary to all their high pres­
Your Draft Board
sea. The presence of communic­
able disease in a communicatee
stage, or louse infestation, will
ATLANTIC AND GULF SBIPPING FOB
consitute cause for disqualifica­
tion until the disease is cured
WEEKS OF NOV. mh TO DEC. 10th
without disqualifying sequelae,
or the applicant is satisfactorily
Q£CK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL
disuifested."
'
SHIPPED
721
602
567
1790
It should be noted that the
author of the proposed' standard
REGISTE^D
609
512
594
1715
for examination made an effort
to list certain diseases and im-

�f.

Friday, December 24, 1943

THE

DeUnqueots To |1^0d.C3[

okserveRMORuieU

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Thre« '

• (

"\

This SIU Contract

Decldc FOF Yourself

By JOHN HAWK
Since the WSA pink and white j
from Page 1)
Steward shall be allowed one (1) hour's
Form No. 61 Aas replaced Form Manning {Continued
shall be put info effect on each vessel
Scale ISO
overtune per day for each day such passen­
No. 48 in handling draft defer­ Persons and Over.
on the dale of next signing articles.
gers are on board. When the number of
ments for seamen, we have had
entered into November
notary officials and/or other persons car­ 20
a lai'ge number of men inducted 1 Steward
$195.00 $17.50 $212.50 ried and served as passengers exceeds six 29' 1943, between the Seafarers' Internation­
al Umon of North America and
into the army. It seems that they 1 2d Steward
Storekeeper
130.00 17,50 147.50 (6) he shall be allowed two (2) hours' over­
are paying little attention to
S. G. THEOBALD,
time per day for- each day such passengers
these new forms and to the RMO| 1 Chef—Chief Cook 165.00 17.50 182.50 are on board. When the Steward is paid
ALCOA STEAMSHIP CO., INC
1 Baker
135.00 17.50 152.5
policy in general.
the
scale
of
wages
provided
in
the
manning
W.
A. KIGGINS, Jr.,
1 2d Cook
105.00 17.50 122.50
scale
for
vessels
carrying
150
and
over,
this
BULL STEAMSHIP CO.
95.00 17.50 112.5
ynder the old set-up Card. No. 1 Third Cook
section does not apply.
BALTIMORE
INSULAR LINE, ma
1
Butcher
100.00
17.50
117.50
48 was sent into each local office
J.
A.
COATES,
6.
(a)
When
enlisted
military
personnel
1
GaUey
Utility
70.00
'
17.50
87.50
of the BMC, and from that office
EASTERN STEAMSHIP
87.50 are camed up to 550 and the military auth­
sent on to Washington, D.C. This 1 Baker's Utility .... 70.00 17.50
LINES, mc.
orities do not furnish the necessary cooks,
1
Pantryman
82.50
17.60
100.00
has been changed in that now 4 Messmen
etc., then there may be added to the Stew­
70.00 17.50
H.
L.
LANFORD,
87.50
all the new forms go directly to 2 UtUity
ards Department personnel:
70.00 17.50
87.50
MISSISSIPPI
SHIPPING CO., mC
Washington and the BMO set-up 1 Utility for every 12
J. J. CONDON,
(1)
Troop
Cook
is more efficient in cracking
persons over 100 .. 70,00 17.50
87.50
SEAS SHIPPmG CO., mc.
$120.00 Plus $17.50—$137.50
down on delinquents. If you
J. E. FASICK,
•;
(1)
Troop
2d
Cook
and
Baker
The
Union
agrees
to
allow
the
company
have to overstay the shore time
SMITH &amp; JOHNSON
tile
right
to
select
persoimel
for
the
follow­
$105.00
Plus
$17.50—$122.50
allotted to you, you must con­
ing positions listed in the above manning
H. ANDERSON,
'
(2) Utilitymen
tact the union Agent in your port scale: Chief Steward, 2d Steward and Store­
WATERMAN
STEAMSHIP
CORP.
$ 70,00 Plus $17.50—$ 87.50
and have him explain the ex- keeper, Baker, and Chef-Chief Cook. How­
J. L. ALWINE,
•tenuating circumstances to the ever, employees of these ratings shall, in The troop 2d Cook and Baker, and one util­
AMERICAN RANGE-LIBERTY
local RMO office. If you fail to any event, be cleared and dispatchec ity man shall work at night time.
LINES, mc.
,
do this it is pretty likely that through the offices of the Union.
(b)-Pursuant to paragraph (a) when
JULIAN STROBERT,
ypu will be classified 1-A and be
4. (a) When the saloon messman is. called troops have disembarked or prior to their
SOUTH ATLANTIC
army bound. In such cases there upon to perform services to military officials embarkation, the extra cooks and utility
STEAMSHIP LINES, INC.
!
is little that the union can do for and other persons carried and served as men that were put on board to cook for
you. For your own welfare, as passengers in connection with making up troops shall work in conjimction with the SEAFARERS' mTERNATIONAL
)
well as the welfare of the union, their rooms and waiting on tables in addi­ crew cooks under the direction of the stew­ UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
JOHN HAWK
I urge all members to be most tion to his regular duties and where the ard. The two troop utility men shall work
UUAUDE FISHER
careful in their observance of number of military passengers is more than as directed by the steward.
two (2) and does not exceed (6), then one
FRANK WILLIAMS
(c)
No
overtime
shall
be
paid
to
the
day
these rules. We need the old- (1) saloon messman and one (1) saloon util­
cooks as provided in paragraph No. 2 when
timers and experienced men ity man shall be allowed one (1) hour's the above troop cooks are carried and no
Sui'PLEMENT AGREEMENT
aboard the ships — not in the overtime each per day for each day such troops are on board.
extra services are performed. When the
army.
7. Working Hours at Sea and in Port.
— to —
number of military officials and/or other The hours of labor for the Stewards Depart­
persons carried and served as passengers ex­ ment shall be eight (8) hours in a spread of
ceeds six (6) and does not exceed sixteen thirteen (13^ hours while at sea and eight
AGREEMENT
j
(16) they shall be allowed two (2) horns' (8) hours in a spread of twelve (12) hours
overtime each per day for each day such while in port.
between the
7
extra services are performed.
8. Bi all ports Saturday afternoon, Sun­
Editor,
4. (b) When more than two (2) persons days and Holidays, prior to embarkation of
and not more than ten (10) persons are car­ Military Officers and troops or after disem­ SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
Dear Sir:
OF NORTH AMERICA
ried and served as passengers in the crew barkation of Military Officers and troops,
I am at present attending I messroom or gun crew messroom, one (1) the
Steward shall be authorized to reduce
school at Pier 73, East River, in| hour's overtime each per day for each day the number of men in his department. How­
— and —
order to receive an A.B. ticket.^ such extra services are performed shall be ever, the normal crew requirements shall be
For this reason I am unable to allowed one messman and to one utility kept on duty in order to feed properly and
ALCOA' STEAMSHIP COMPANY, INC. '
come down personally to see you. man. When the number of persons exceeds serve the crew, gun crew and other persons
A. H. BULL STEAMSHIP COMPAlSrY
ten (10) and does not exceed twenty (20)
BALTIMORE INSULAR LINE, INC.
There seems to be a general they shall be allowed two (2) hours' over­ aboard.
EASTERN
STEAMSHIP LINES, INC.
9. It is imderstood that where this supple­
opinion here that unionism does time each per day for each day such extra
MISSISSIPPI
SHIPPING CO., INC.
ment
agreement
provides
for
overtime
to
not pay. Therefore, I would like services are performed,
SEAS SHIPPING COMPANY, INC.
the
Stewards
Department
personnel
because
to have a copy of the most re­
5. When military officials and/or other of carrying pd serving the additional per­
SMITH &amp; JOHNSON
cent Union Agreement in your persons are carried and served as passen­ sons as specified herein extra compensation WATERMAN STEAMSHIP CORPORATION
possession. As a last resort, I gers, the Chief Steward shall receive addi­ for serving extra meals as provided under AMERICAN RANGE-LIBERTY LINES Inc
would appreciate a copy of anyj tional compensation for the extra duties existing agreements is not to apply.
SOUTH ATLANTIC STEAMSHIP LINES
agreement, (that is any date.) j necessary for service to such passengers as
The terms and provisions hereof shall
With this agreement in my pop-1 follows:
Covering Manning Scale
not be binding and effective until all
When the number of military officials
session I can, better base my ar­
For Vessels Carrying 4200 to 2000 Troops
the terms and provisions hereof shall
other persons carried and served as
gument on the benefit of being j and/or
have been approved by the War Ship­
passengers is more than two (2) and does
Which Are Not Self-Sustained.
an SIU member.
ping Administration. Thereafter it
not exceed six (6) persons, then the Chief
{Continued on Page 4)
The general reason for not
joining the union seems to be the I time that they should pay the
fact that there is nothing to gain, penalty and not be allowed into
In a good many cases the argu-. the union.
ment seems to be that although
j
g new member of the
the men, who walked the
I union. I joined in Baltimore in
lines during the Past strikes,
1943 I didn't attend a
gained their end, their is noth- J^Ja].itime School, having drawn
ing to be gained today. 'The fact
pgp^^.^ fj.om the Customs
that these men, had their heads jjQugg jn February, 1940. Shipthe seamen were recruited. On ring, watches and suits went into
GALVESTON
broken to better conditions,
.^gg ygj.y slow in those days
the East coast we had the East­ Uncle Ben's, you were locked out
means nothing. The main object
j couldn't join the union. Nevern
&amp; Gulf Sailors, Marine Fire­ by the shipping board and the
seems to be to duck the initiation gj-theiess, I believe in unionism The last war * * * remember?
shipowners. The NMU was not
and monthly dues. There is only
^
^hg^
Silk shirts, pink ones, green ones, men, and Cooks and Stewards even heard of in those days.
one way to break up this pracu • „ *
Union, Sailors Union of the Paci­
tic=. I suggest that the union,
'»"eht m the blue ones with white stripes. And
you
bought
silk
stockings
for
the
fic,
Marine Firemen, Cooks &amp; Yes, it was a hard, hard strug­
when sending men aboard a ship schools at Sheephead Bay re­
girls to put on legs that had nev­ Stewards on the Pacific Coast. gle; wages went down, down, and
appoint one as a delegate to view gqrding unions, but I do feel
down. Conditions, there just
er felt anything but cotton be­
all books or trip cards aboard, that men that are going along fore. Wrist watches, rings, brace­ All affiliated with the A. F. of L. were none. Jobs? Well, it just
they all stuck together, the ship­
Those men that have shipped
11^^ union today should be lets, hand-tailored suits and ten
ping board knew of this fact, and depended how well the company
through fink organizations should
. . . • . u x ^.
dollar hats. The wages were not were not in the position to sup­ or the herder of the shipping
he riplaeed by union men if Protected m the luture.
the same as you are receiving in ply finks on the ships right after board liked you. It took just 13
available. Of course, I must ad-l Looking forward to receiving
years to realize that we had
this war. Then it happened.
the war.
mit ignorance of technicalities j an agreement, I remain,
enough of this shipowner's crap.
1918 and the Armistice. The But things rolled along until
that have arisen since the war.
Respectfully yours,
war
boom petered out, in ship­ 1921, crash—crash—^the shipown­ On the picket lines men gave
Perhaps there are reasons why
PAUL
H.
REHERT.
yard after yard the wheels turn­ ers along with the shipping board up their lives, went to jail so
this practice cannot be put into
ed slower—slower, then stopped. had you out on strike pounding that we could come back again
effect. But—there will come a
At that time we had what was the bricks. There were stew pots and be treated as men, not as
time when these men will no
fCeep
In
Touch
With
the U.S. Shipping Board, Sea- in most union halls, and the men dogs. We did pretty good, but
longer be able to ship from the
service Bureau, that was where were sleeping on the floors. Your
Your Draft Board
fink organizations. That is the
{Continued on Page 4)

I

1|

n
f]

rl

Editors Mail

WHArS DOING

Around the Ports

r

• f

�Page Four

NEWS AROUND
THE SIU PORTS
{Continued from Page i)

Kfc

it

A

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, December 24, 1943

Read This SIU Contract

7. If troops^-e sel.
j-^amirsg. this agrsawiii
2. One combinatior^ waiter and Bedroom
not good enough until 1936. The
{Continued from Page 3)
ment
does
not
apply.
Steward
for
every
12
Officers
carried.
If
2
Emergency
Base
shipowner thought the time was
Rating
Pay
Increase
Total
meals only served, one for every 15 officers.
The tei-ms and provisions hereof shall
ripe again, but he judged wrong. 1 Chief
Steward .... $195.00 $17.50 $212.50 Waiters and Bedroom Stewards are to work
not be binding and effective until all
We come out on top again. He 1 Second Steward .. 122.50 17.50 140.00
as Utility Men when no troops are on board,
the terms ari provisions hereof shall
n rtrk er rv
did not have tb^shipping board I Chqf
17.50
165.00
and their working hours shall be weekdays
have been approved hy the Wiwe ^hip­
137.50 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturdays from
17.50
120.00
to give him a hand, most of the i Chiei Cook
ping Administration. Thereafter it
122.50 8 a.m, to 12 Noon. During these hours they
17.50
105.00
men who ran the shipping board 1 Second Cook
shall
be put into effect on each vessel
17.50
112.50
95.00
were i^ewarded by shipping com­ 1 Third Cook
shall do general cleaning work and sougeeon
the
date of next signing articles.
87.50 ing in the Stewards Department with the
70.00 17.50
missioner, or deputy jobs. Alone, 1 Galley Utility
This
agreement
is entered into November
152.50 exception of the ice boxes without the pay­
17.50
135.00
1 Chief Baker
the shipowner cannot beat us.
29, 1943, between the Seafarers' lnternation«
1
Second
Baker—
ment of overtime. When no troops are on al Union of North America and
Hold on a minute brother . . .
17.50
137.50
to work nights .... 120.00
did we miss it in '23, '34, '36 and 1 Assistant Baker .. 95.00 17.50 112.50 board if the vessel is short any regular
S. C. THEOBALD,
raessmen the Steward may assign waiter'37 when men walked the streets, 1 Baker's Utility—
'
ALCOA STEAMSHIP CO., INC.
bedroom stewards to perform messmen
camped out, lived in huts and
87.50 duties and in such cases "his hours shall be
W. A. KIGGINS, Jr.,
17.50
to work nights .... 70.00
shacks. Hold on once more 1 Chief Butcher
17.50
117.50 the same as those for a messman.
A. H. BULL STEAMSHIP CO.
100.00
100.00
brother—this time chances are 1 Asst. Butcher
82.50 17.50
BALTIMORE INSULAR LINE, INC.
3. Utility men assigned to Galley, Bake
100.00
17.50
82.50
J. A. COATES,
we won't bounce back again on 1 Chief Pantryman
Shop, Pantry and Army Galley shall sign
92.50
17.50
75.00
EASTERN STEAMSHIP
1
Second
Pantryman
top. Many seamen realize what
on as Utility Men and work as general util­
87.50
17.50
70.00
LINES, INC.
1
Utility
Pantryman
a close shave it was, and how
137.50 ity men under the direction of the Steward
17.50
120.00
H.
L.
LANFORD,
1
Army
Cook
desperately near we were to
when troops are not on board.
MISSISSIPPI
SHIPPING CO., INC.
1
Army
Second
chaos and ruin. Must we come
4. When no troops are aboard, the Army
122.50
17.50
J. J. CONDON,
105.00
Cook
down with another crash?
17.50
87.50 Cook and Army Second Cook shall be re­
70.00
SEAS SHIPPING CO., INC.
1 Army Utility
Must we ignore, not one nor 1 Storekeeper
J. E. FASICK,
sr.
17.50
97.50 quired to assist the cooks in the main galley.
80.00
two nor three, but the lessons 1 Asst. Storekeeper. 75.00 17.50
5. In all ports Saturday afternoon, Sun­
92.50
SMITH &amp; JOHNSON
^:
taught us by history! Must we 1 Linen Keeper .,... 80.00 17.50
97.50 days and Holidays, prior to embarkation of
H. ANDERSON,
Military Officers and troops or after disem-.
head straight along the road to 1 Second Cook—
WATERMAN STEAMSHIP CORP.'
17.50
J. L. ALWINE,
to work nights .... 105.00
122.50 barkation of Military Officers and troops,
ruin. It's beginning to happen
70.00
17.50
87.50 the Steward shall be authorized to reduce
AMERICAN RANGE-LIBERTY
right here—now. You may ask Messmen
LINES, INC.
!
17.50
87.50 the number of men in "his department. How­
Utility
70.00
how. The WSA, RMO, and the
ever, an adequate number of men shall be
JULIAN
STROBERT,
W
aiter-Bedroom
hatchet men in the NMU are out
17.50
70.00
87.50 kept on duty in order to feed properly and
Steward
SOUTH ATLANTIC
I
to break you and your union.
serve the crew, gun crew and other persons
STEAMSHIP
LINES,
INC.
j'
Win, lose, or draw, the war will
1. The Union agrees to allow the com­ aboard.
end some day. No war has lasted pany the right to select personnel for the
6. Working Hours at Sea and in Port. The
;
forever. Your union obtained all following positions: Chief Steward, Chief hours of labor for the Stewards Department SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL
of the benefits, good wages, that Baker, Second Steward, Chef and Store­ shall be eight (8) hours in a spread of thir­ UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
JOHN HAWK
you are enjoying today. So keeper. However, employees of these ratings teen (13) hours while at sea and eight (8)
CLAUDE FISHER
'
j
brother put your shoulder to the shall, fn any event, be cleared and dis­ hours in a spread of twelve (12) hours while
in port.
FRANK WILLIAMS
wheel and help exterminate patched through the offices of the Union.
these parisites that seek to take ness to haunt them.
PORT EVERGLADES
your gains and rights away from So once again a Merry and
you. Help keep the SIU and the Warm Christmas and a Happy The scandal mongers on the
SUP on an even keel.
New Year to All.
radio tell us Captain Macauley
E. R. WALLACE. Agent
JOHN MOGAN, Agent of the WSA has made the "state­
ment that he is prepared to sail
BOSTON
the ships without union crews.
SAVANNAH
We find this very easy to believe,
Hello everybody, also a Merry
in fact we have known that Cap­
delighted—as he says letters
{Continued from Page 1)
Christmas and a Happy New Shipping in this port lately has tain Macauley and his stooges in
been very good. Have shipped the RMO have been preparing to Union will be more than appre­ from home help keep him alive.
Year, if such is possible.
out everyone I could get my
ciated and above all to know his Please find enclosed envelope
I see by the papers that (Fog hands on and could have used a replace union crews with finks old shipmates are thinking of addressed to him in Germany.
Horn) Macauley is blowing off few more. Had two new ships for the past two years.
him.
Thanks,
again and most everyone is ask­ out this last week, one here and
Macauley and some of the rest
As 1 am allowed one label
Yours truly,
ing me what's the matter with one in Jacksonville and had a of the chair warmers in Wash­ every sixty days 1 have used the
ETHEL RIGGINS
that bloke. By the looks of the West Coast ship in Charleston ington find it difficult to explain one sent me in November and
East Tallassee, Ala.
wire Foggy sent to Harry Lunde- that took a full deck crew. Have to the public why they continue my next one will come to me
Dec. 17, 1943
berg it is easily seen that he has been lucky in getting old-timers to spend the taxpayers' money some time in January. However, Mr. Hawk,
ho training in diplomacy and for for these ships and have had to training men as seamen, when 1 will be more than glad to sur­ Dear Mr. Hawk:
the life of me I can't see how call WSA for only a very few the beach is full of unemployed render same to you at that time. 1 will be glad to surrender one
anyone with such a narrowmind- men.
seamen of all ratings now. It is 1 am enclosing an information of my labels in regard to your
ed brain could be appointed to
true that in some sections there circular from the Prisoner of letter of Dec. tenth, and you
Hope things will stay this way is a shortage of seamen of certain War Information Bureau.
such an important public office.
don't know how much 1 appreci­
and 1 can continue to get oldIf January is too late to send ate your letter,
Now he talks about preserving timers for the ships coming out ratings, but it would be wiser
the health of the seamen, etc.," around here. As far as 1 know and less expensive for the WSA your gift—please advise me as 1 And I am sure my brother
and so on. Well, I've been beef­ right now 1 will have anpther to transport men from the over­ am most anxious to use the label William E. Weaver will appreci­
ate anything you all will send
ing about getting the seamen that new ship coming out here around stocked areas to the area where just as soon as it arrives.
It may interest you to know and knowing you all are thinkin)
sail the North Atlantic some the 24th of this month and will the shortage exists, than it is to
warm* clothes, such as helmets, be needing men with ratings in take men that the armed forces my son has been' a prisoner of of him.
Inclosed you will find an offi­
coats, and footwear and I am all departments a? 1 have ship­ need and send them to school at war now for nearly two yearsthe
expense
of
the
government,
and
he
still
writes
a
very
cheer­
cial
label to him. 1 will thanl
told that unless they go to Rus­ ped everyone who was on the
later
to
be
put
aboard
ships
in
ful
and
interesting
letter.
1
am
you
all
again for your kindness
sia they are out of luck. I pre­ beach here and don't have any­
the
place
of
experienced
and
sure
if
any
of
the
boys
would
Sincerely
yours,
sume that Foggy made that rul­ one registered at the present
care to write him he would be
MARGARET HATCHETTT
ing, if not then I am subject to time. Now would be a very good qualified old-timers.
correction. He also said some- chance for any of the members
Many of the men in the mer­ tales of the convpyg that were sea would be a great injustice to
, thing about sailing the ships who want to ship before the holi­ chant ships today could not pass blasted to hell, and hundreds them, and would mean a great
without the co-operation of the days to do so, as 1 have, used all the physical examinations requir­ more didn't live to teU the tale. loss to the industry. If they can­
, SIU. Well maybe he is thinking available men from around this ed by the Army and Navy but Yes, thousands were physically not go to sea they have only one
about shipping out and if he does port.
are entirely able to perform the qualified to take the ships out road open. They would have to
ship out he will go down in his­
duties of a seaman. If these men when Hitler's "U" boats were go to work ashore. A man that
tory as the first public appointee The weather here isn't so bad, are disqualified through a phoney laying just off Long Island and has spent most of his life at sea
we have had a few cold days, physical examination, -they will Diamond Shoal, waiting to stick
who ever did anything useful.
would be' as out of place as a
I suppose that if he reads this even had a little snow, but it is be denied the right to serve their a fish in their bellies. They were barn dance in a graveyard, if he
he will get burned up but that warming up again and should be country. And 1 dare to say that qualified to sail the ships when took a job ashore.
' for constructive criticism.
pleasant again in a couple of the men of the seamen's unions there were no guns or escorts to Surely, the government that
Now there's another public ap­ days. If shipping stays as good have proven over and over again protect them from the enemy. these men have served so well
pointee that should do something
that they are not lacking on pa­ They were physically able to die during these past two years of
with their ships when the going war can not permit one of its
useful by wising up his mother- as it has been lately no one will triotism or guts either.
in-law about quitting as the sea­ have any trouble shipping out of
It is a curious wonder that the was tough, but now they are no agencies to take away their right
men don't go for stoolpidgeons the Savannah port.
union seamen were physically longer physically fit to do the to make a living and to serve the
' and I know that if Old Andy
able to saiil the ships during the work that they have spent the war effort, just because that
CHARLES WAID. Agent times when a lot more ships most of their lives doing and.
• could know that that kind of peragency is headed by an egotistic­
' son was employed in any place
sailed out of ports than ever know better than anything else al and authority crazed labozt
Keep In Touch With came back. Hundreds of the in the world.
; bearing his good name he cerbaiter.
union seamen can tell horrifying To force these men from the
. • tainly would make it his busiYour Draft Board
J. K. SHAUGHNESSY. Agent

Relatives Praise Our
Gift Plans For SIU
Prisoners Of War

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                <text>Vol. V, No. 38</text>
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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
RELATIVES PRAISE OUR GIFT PLANS FOR SIU PRISONERS OF WAR&#13;
CURRAN'S GHOST WRITER JOINS LAMENTATIONS ON SIU STEWARDS CONTRACT&#13;
RELATIVES PRAISE OUR GIFT PLANS FOR SIU PRISONERS OF WAR&#13;
READ THIS CONTRACT-DECIDE FOR YOURSELF&#13;
AFL DEMANDS HIGH WAGE STANDARDS AND SHORTER HOURS IN POST WAR ERA&#13;
HAWK WARNS DRAFT DELINQUENTS TO OBSERVE RMO RULE</text>
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                    <text>OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THEATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
W SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
Vol. V.

NEW YORK. N.Y» FRIDAY. DECEMBER 31, 1943

No. 39

A "Log" ^ Headline Review Of 1943
SECVIIITY
IH
UmYf
^^^^^============——====—

V*'

HO. J1

Crew Gete $7,OW
lOur Worki^S?:

tOr''t
&lt;r ^&lt;r

WSPa&amp;

WVCKOFF'S SABOTAGE
^
ATLANTIC LD^

[SHIPOWNER FRAMES
*NEW ENGLAN

;oin the West Ov,
jnning

[New Wit)

"n'onj in nr,.

"" the :

- ®iDf
m ^5
to p"=i

So

I/NI'^

co^

We Open New I
Union Hall
alif.

|li^2is4£e

1 AT^on'

Was .i "^'"' J

Ztson,

Hl9

W...

'"'•0 St.

"any. ""• '"•

ite'
aj

C";,"'';,"'''Pbc'f®- ""PT/ CAR
Hon

ork

"'-5'

ere;

v.,
Atlantic Fishermen Call
ike For Living Wage

'od se,... —Si^ntniei

/1

AV" -

fe°si'?c«

Uhe most

irAnspof^"
, \AO\&gt;1'^ "P '
I pa.J

rtvte Saga Oi

of union-government-industry negotiations for .in in-i |
the Atlantic Fishermen's Union, SlU, pulled the pin^
ew Bedford fleets this week. Th^^
he fish wholesalers^

Lundeberg Leads SIU-SUP In
Successful Defense Of Jones Act«ii*^**^^RcES
AFL-CIO To End

Maritime labor scored aii
week when it smashed a movj
,war and

• III

I big
fling

to

l^r^EF^uscieiff^rrr

.\c undc'
Fedct^"

Very p

Gulf Pfshermen Make First
Big Gains Under SIU Ba

l5ed By

WIN CLOSED SHOP AT HIGGINS St. Petersburg
The Oulf District Towboatmcn
of the SIU have been designated
as the exclusive bargaining
agents for all licensed and un­
licensed personnel, boat operat­
ors. deck hands, and' all other
ratings on floating equipment in
the Higgins Ship Yards of Ni
Orleans, Louisiana by the
al Labor Relations
We have been fl:

present time t!
company immediately.
At the present time some pro­ men are the^
gress has been made toward on the I
T. we
completing the agreement
we hope -to iron out tl^
ini-poinU al a

Contim

I T

. T^_

S.I.U. CREWS LAUDED
FOR HEROISM AT SEA
The crews of

iMI

••6 I

— ^
rTrZ*n1/&gt;/Z
,nirs
AreAllot»cd
Fuss Budget Wyckoff
, xdtiaius"»"P°
tnglon.»-=;
September 6..1943

Thi. "'"nd
trip isa^"un'uig'««
OK"'
The

ai

M
The. ""I'tTmost dangerow']
dowi^

hips were the object of high praise this week from the
camenship while under enemy attack on the high seas '
lit tajl|MC.erchant marine and the union to which

These headlines clipped from various issues of the Seafarers Log printed during the past year, reveal that it has been a busy
\l2 months for the union. We have been engaged in a constant battle with the shipowners and the government in defense of our^
\rights and conditions. We have not won all the battles, but have won the majority of them —and the most vital ones.

I

�•'vg;';

•i*

' Page Two

:i®-

1%'
iB.

I

THE

SEAFARERS

.fR€P01?T orv
^ASHirVGTOIV

Pitblished by the

't'

SEAFARERS' INTERNATiaNAL UNION
OF NORTH AMRRICA
AHantic and Gulf District
HARRY LUNDEBERG

- - - - - - President

110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HA^E

------- Secy-Treas.

P. O. Box 25, Station P., New York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Rep,
424 5 th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.

n

m

Directory of Branches
BRANCH

PHONE

ADDRESS

• BV MATT4IEW DuSHAM^e^

SELECTIVE SERVICE

Affiliated with the American Fedcrathn of Labor .

NEW YORK (4)
2 Stone St
BOwIlns Green 9-3437
BOSTON (10)..
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 405 7
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Gay St
.Calvert 4539
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St
Lombard 7651
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS (16) . .321 Chartres St
Canal 3336
SAVANNAH.....
216 East Bay St
Savannah 3-1728
TAMPA
423 East Piatt St,....... Tampa MM-1323
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St
.Dial 2-1392
PUERTO R1C(3...
45 Ponce de Leon...
Puerto do Tlerra
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-6043
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway... Ft. Lauderdale 1601
n
K
OR

PUBLICATION OFFICE;
- ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8345
267

3-hom. JhsL ^tcdufi, fijunA. —
Bankei-s Loaned Germany Seven .Billions
For many, many years Lord
Vansittart was a high-ranking
"civil servant," and was, there­
fore, in a position to acquire in­
side knowledge of what was go­
ing on in Britain—politically,
financially and diplomatically. He
retired after this war started and
Kt'.ig George rewarded him with
a seat in the House of Lords.

Friday,. December 31. 1943 '

LOQ

SEAFARERS LOG

I/TH-:
n i'i •*...

•'

not sign clear of the articles as
they take a chance of losing cer­
tain conditions which are incor­
porated in the ship's articles.
They are entitled to wages imtil
their vessel arrives back in the
U.S. 'The WSA is now checking
to see what the articles of the
SS Thomas Hill called for,
whether there was a transporta­
tion clause in there.

Washington have put the ding ori
the RMO, they are given a flop
and chow, in some instances giv­
en transportation to some sea'
port. Of course the boys claim
that they are stranded.

Quite a few cases coming in
here wherein officials of the
union are being classified in 1-A,
or being ordered inducted into
the Army. They are not being
*One of these mooches came in
to see me. He stated that he was
even given considei'ation as sea­
a member of the SIU, his name
men and permitted to go to sea
is Wilham Costello, and he stated
when their local board turns
that he was going to Miami to
down the union's request for de­
join the SS Alcoa Trader.
A.
W.
Armstrong,
SIU
Agent,
ferment as an official of the
New
Orleans:
Re;
Crew
of
MV
union. These cases have all been
He did not have his uniofi
taken up with the RMO end HQ Cape Pillar clahn for overtime book with him and stated that
while loading ammunition on
of Selective Service.
the union official in N.Y. sent his
Sunday.
book to the union hall in Miami.
Advised all union officials to
TJpon being informed that the
The
WSA
has
sent
a
letter
to
immediately contact their respec­
union did not have a hall there,
tive HQ whenever they are being Mr. C. H. MarshaU, Gulf Coast he tried to wiggle out with an­
director
of
the
WSA
on
Decem­
given the works, so that HQ can
other cock and bull story.
inmiediately make arrangements ber 13, 1943, and has stated that
members of the unlicensed per­
for an appeal, and right up the
This bird looked to me like S
sonnel loading ammunition be­
line to the President's Commit­
professional bum and certainly is
tween 5 P.M. and 9 P.M. are en­
tee. RMO here does not make an
not good union material. The
titled
to $3.00 per hour for such
appeal for luiion officials, they
RMO gave him a night's flop.
work under the terms of Section
will support the union's request
33. If, however, this interpreta­ Claims that he has been sailing
for an appeal. Here is a list of
tion of the agreement is disputed, since 1938 and joined the SIU
union officials who are being re­
the claim would have to be taken last July in N.Y. Stated that he
classified 1-A, and others ordered
to arbitration under the terms of has never joined any union prior
to report for induction.
section 4 and 5 of the SIU agree­ to that time, has been sailing on
ment and the company involved, tankers.
Pietro Albert Maniscalo,
SUP patrolman, S.F.
Advise all agents to keep tabs
UNITED SEAMEN'S SERVICE
E. Wilson, SUP Business
on
this guy, and he is strictly a
agent, Norfolk.
There is quite a racket going leech.
Herbert Yate, SIU patrolman, on by some seamen who have
Wilmington, Calif.
The WSA has requested that
figured out angles to put the ding
Buck Stepheris, SIU patrol­
the
AFL appoint some one to be
on this outfit. It has come to my
man, New brleans.
on
their
post war planning com­
attention that several boys are
mittee.
Matthew Woll, Vice
going
from
one
seaport
to
an­
The RMO has supported the
President
of the AFL has re­
other
and.
putting
the
ding
on
union's request for deferment in
quested that 1 accept this assign­
the
people
who
have
charge
of
the above cases. However, it is
necessary for HQ of the union to the purse strings in this set-up. ment for the AFL in the Mari­
time Industry. Believe that it is
keep working on all of these The angle is that they are active
important that we have some one
seamen
and
before
they
can
ship
cases, and not depend on the
they
need
a
month's
room
rent
on that committee to look after
RMO offices. H.Q. of Selective
for
their
wives,
mothers,
etc.
our interest in the maritime inService will not overrule local or
state directors on any case. All Several boys passing through dustry
cases should be taken to the
President's Committee when all
bq Votincn)
Conqrcssmfln Dripp
other means have failed, and
these appeals should come from
H.Q. of the unions.

• •'

answer is that British and other
international bankers loaned him
$7,000,000,000! The money was
raised by selling German secur­
ities to investors in Britain, the
United States and other democ­
ratic nations, and now practically
all those securities are in default.
Mussolini was financed in the
same way.
If the bankers had not advanc­
Now Lord Vansittart is spon­ ed these enormous, loans, this
soring a drastic program to dreadful war would not have oc­
shackle Prussian militarism. curred, because the champions of
Space will not permit a review Fascism would not have been
of all his proposals, but one point able to enslave the people of
needs to be stressed.
their own countries and prepare
How was Hitler able to finance for the subjugation of the rest of
Ihe war machine he has used to the world.
J. K. Shaughenessey, SIU
terrorize the world? Vansittart's
•—Labor Agent, Fort Lauderdale: Case of
Robert Oiven Stevens has been
turned over to the RMO, They
have filled out form 42-A and
have notified his local board to
Since the WSA pink and white have to overstay the shore time give consideration to this man
Form No. 61 has replaced Form allotted to you, you must con­ as an active seaman as per direc­
No. 48 in handling draft defer­ tact the union Agent in your port tive of War Manpower Commis­
and have him explain the ex­ sion. Advise you to contact local
ments for seamen, we have had
tenuating circumstances to the RMO on any similiar cases in the
a large number of men inducted
local
RMO office. If you fail to future as they have this jurisdic­
into the aTmy. It seems that they
do
this
it is pretty likely that tion over active seamen.
are paying little attention to
you
will
be classified I-A and be
these new forms and to the RMO
army
bound.
In such cases there All ships delegates, and pa­
policy in general.
is little that the union can do for trolmen should make it their
Under the old set-up Card No, you. For your own welfare, as business to see that masters of
48 was sent into each local office well as the welfare of the union, vessels send in RMO form 61
of the RMO, and from that office I urge all members to be most when crews sign on and pay off.
sent on to Washington, D.C. This careful in their observance of
Arthur Burke, SUP Patrolman,
has been changed in that now these rules. We need the old- S.F. Case of Ralph Johnson who
all the new forms go directly to timers and experienced men was sick while a member of the
Washington and the RMO set-up aboard the ships — not in the crew of the SS Jane Delano and
is more efficient in cracking army.
paid off of the vessel in Durban.
down on delinquents. If you
-JOHN HAWK WSA position on this matter is
that he isn't entitled to transpor­
tation to the Pacific Coast as he
ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
signed off of his vessel thereby,
making that part of the ship's
WEEK OF DECEMBER 13th TO 18th
articles null. It is important that
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL all members must again be noti­
fied that when ever they are sick
and
go to a hospitaL they should
SHIPPED
360
295
280
935

DRAFT INFORMATION

REGISTERED -

— 301

272

300

873

Keep In Touch With
Your Draft Board

rbiro GgNTLEMEN EROM THE CiO ,ANO AFL
SEE YOU,

&gt;

�Friday, Decembor 31, 1843

THE

HAPPY NEW YEAR?
This is the traditional time to wish friends a
"Happy New Year," and we make such a wish for
all SlU ihem Howiever, we would" be less than real­
istic if we expected any degree of fulfillment for
the wish.
The men who man the merchant ships have had
a rough time of it during the past year and they will
have just as bad a time in the year to come—^no one
can deny this fact. It's not just the enemy bombs
and torpedoes that we're talking about (though
those are no small item, God knows), rather is it
the home front offensive ag^ainst the rights and liv­
ing conditions of the men.
Facing storms and loneliness and submarines is
part of the modern seamen's job and he is doing it
with unparalleled courage and fortitude. But he
feels that his sacrifices at sea entitle him to a living
wage, union security and the dignity of a freeborn
man. He receives none of these without a continual
and bitter battle with profit ma.d shipowners and
power drunk Washington bureaucrats.
While the seaman risks his very life in the
prosecution of this war, the shipowner sits safely at
home and schemes how to . break the unions and cut
his payroll costs. And this situation isn't going to
change in 1944—-it's going to get worse.
So, we don't make an idle wish for a "Happy
New Year," rather do we wish for all SIU men a
New Year of courage and militancy and solidarity;
courage to face the dangers they must, militancy in
the face of their enemies at home, and solidarity
with all union brothers in the building of a strong
union which is the only guarantee of achieving a
"Happy New Year" in the years to come.

SIU Hero Lauded
On Return To Sea
SIU Fishermen's
Strike Spreads

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Three

ADMIRAL LAND ISSUES
MEDICAL EXAM RULES
Lakes SIU Warns
Railroads On Scabs
DETROIT' Dec. 27 = Somo
700 car fer*y seamen affili­
ated with the Seafarers In­
ternational Union (AFL) in
the Great Lakes district
warned today that they
would join in the impending
walkout of railroad brother­
hoods and unions if the railrocids attempted to substitute
non-union employes.
Mardy Polaner, district
secretary - treasurer of the
Seafarers, sent telegrams
Stating their stand in the rail­
road controversy to ferry op­
erators including the Ann
Arbor Railroad at Frankfurt,
Mich.; the Grand Trunk
Western Railroad here; the
Pere Marquetto Railroad
here, and the Mackinac
Transportation Co., Mar­
quette, Mich.
The messages mformed the
ferry operators the seamen
would refuse to work with
scabs and would not move
freight cars handled by them.

MONEY DUE
LOUIS DOYLE, DOMINICK
TRAIANO, HERAL COBLER:
You have differential in wages
coming from the last trip of the
SS Marina. Collect from any
Bull Line office.
*
*
*
Overtime is coming to the fol­
lowing crew members of the
SS Del Aires:
C. MICOSZEK
J. KORNAFSKI
L. GOEMAN
A. JEPSON
E. TORRES
J. DAND
J. JOHNSTON
BOB NOAH
J. VALESQUEZ.
Collect from any office of Miss­
issippi Line.

The War Shipping Administra­
tion has just released the new
revised medical examinations
which are to be binding on Jan­
uary 1, 1944. Every member of
the union should study the fol­
lowing text of Admiral Land's
order. The WSA has announced
that these regulations wiU go in­
to effect, irre.speptive of any ob­
jections to them by the various
maritime unions.
1. In order to safeguard the
health of crew's members and
troops, and the safety and effici­
ency of the vessel itself, there
shall be instituted the practice of
requiring regular annual, as well
as signing on medical examina­
tions and the basic immunization
of all licensed and unlicensed
personnel employed on aU Am­
erican, Honduran, and Panamian
flag vessels owned by or under
bareboat charter to the War
Shipping Administration.
2. Nothing in this order is ap­
plicable to medical programs of
shipping companies which al­
ready have such programs in op­
eration. This general order is
applicable only to facilitie.s and
programs of the United States
Public Health Service and the
War Shipping Administration
which either are available or will
be made available to carry out
the purpose of this order.
3. In accordance with admin­
istrative order No. 51, these ex­
aminations shall be under the
guidance and control of the med­
ical director of the War Shipping
Administration, who shall be an
officer of the United States Pub­
lic Health Service detailed for
the purpose by the Surgeon-Gen­
eral of that service. The medical
director will be represented in
each port by a port medical rep­
resentative, who, at ports where
the Public Health Service main­
tains a first of second class relief
station, shall be the medical of­
ficer in charge of the Public

Health Service relief station at
that port. The port medical rep­
resentatives shall have supervis­
ory charge of these examinations
in their respective ports.
4. The signing on examina-.
tions are designed to discover
cases of tuberculosis, veneral di-sease, commimicable and infec­
tious diseases, epilepsy, Insanity,
and acute surgical conditions.
Special immunizations shall be
arranged for when vessels are
proceeding into pestilence areas.
Annual physical examinations,
providing the basis of individual
treatment and' cure, shall be in­
stituted as rapidly as facilities
permit.
5. Experienced seamen shall
not be disqualified for age or dis­
abilities due to age and occupa­
tional wear and tear. The pur­
pose of the program is protection
to others and remedial action for
those needing it. The hospital
facilities of the United States
Public Health Service and the
rehabilitation program of the
Federal Security Agency are al­
ready available for seamen re­
quiring such services.
6. Examinations .will be in­
stituted at each port where mari­
time activity justifies it on the
effective date of this order, or as
soon thereafter as po.ssible. Sup­
plements win be issued to this
order for carrying out these ex­
aminations and immunizations
and the procedures to be follow­
ed.
7. Standards for medical ex­
aminations shall "be set by the
medical director of the War Ship­
ping Administration, under the
requirements and with the ap­
proval of the United States Pub­
lic Health Service.
8. Each examinee, if he so de­
sires, shall be fully advised oral­
ly regarding the facts disclosed
by his examination. If he fur-

(Continiied on Page 4)
Brother Jules Souza, hero of
the sinking of the SS Alcoa
Guide, received praise this week
for returning to sea after only a
short period of recuperation on
the beach. Officials pointed to As the strike of the Atlantic
him as a man "typifying the Fishermen's Union, SIU, entered
spirit of the merchant marine." its sixth week today, the import­
The Alcoa Guide was attacked ant Gloucester fleet of 100 boats
by three submarines that put began tying up. Gloucester had
/approximately 100 shells into previously reached an agreement
her before she went down. Rafts on catch prices with the whole­
and boats were launched "with
&amp;eat difficulty because the en­ salers and the OPA, but the
gines were running full ahead, branch is now walking out in
jnd there was no one in the en­ support of the other ports which
gine room. With great difficulty have been unable to reach any
iart ^of the black gang went be­ agreement.
low to reverse the engines, al' lowing Souza to launch the rafts. This support from the Glou­
iSouza fished three shipmates out cester fishermen was announced
' of the sea and the four of them by Austin Powers, business agent
spent weeks on the raft. The for the union in that port. Pow­
others died before rescue arrived ers said that some 270 members
,'; on the 32nd day — Souza being of the branch had met to de­
' the sole survivor.
nounce the wholesalers and OPA
and
to lay plans for active sup­
As these words are being writ­
port
of the union by strike ac­
ten Souza is again at sea.
tion. Another meeting of the
full 700 members of the branch
These heads of the five operating railroad unions are shown on Dec. 23rd as they entered the
will be held the end of the week
White House in the lEist step of their yeeir long fight to win wage increases to meet the sky-rocket­
v/hen the formal strike vote will
ing cost of living. Shortly after meeting with these union leaders (and denying their just wage de­
be taken and the boats tied up.
mands), President Roosevelt seised all the railroads in the country and proceded to oj^erate them
In the meantime the fishing under army control.
CHARLES SEYMOUR
(Left to right) T. C. Cashen, Switchmen's Union; H. F. Eraser, Order of Railway Conductors;
fleets in Boston, New Bedford
Contact Ait. Samuel SegaL 11 and New York remain tied to A. F. Whitney, Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen; A. L. Johnston, Brotherhood of Locomotive En­
gineers; and D. B. Robertson, Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen St Enginemen.
their docks.
Broadway, New York City,

1

k\

. ,

1

•

i

*
••rk • •

�• " ,=
Pagp ,F;ow

THE

SEAFARERS

Mules On Issuing Trip MEDICAL
Collection Of
Dues, OK'ing Transfers

' ' All Districts of the Seafarers International Union have adopted
imiforna and integrated rules on issuing Trip Cards and the transfering of members from one District to another. These rules were
first drawn up at the San Francisco meeting of the SIU Executive
Board this faU, and have since been ratified by the membership up
5and do^ the coast.

Friday, Decfember 31, 1943

LOG

{Continued from Page 3) .
ther desires a written statement,
it will be furnished to him in
conformance with established
regulations and practices of the
United States Public Health Ser­
vice. •
9. If a seaman who has failed
to pass a medical examination,
questions the correctness of the

EXAM RULES

decision, he may appeal in ac­
cordance with the provisions of
hi.s collective bargaining agree­
ments. If the seamen's collective
bargaining agre'ehients contains
no specific provision relative to
physical condition, or no collec­
tive bargaining agreements ex­
ists, the dispute shfeU be settled
by a doctor satisfactory to both

'issuing Trip Cards:
1. All men who do not have trip cards issued by a district af­
filiated, with the SIU, and who are dispatched aboard vessels we
have under contract, must be dispatched through the union hall
:»ith a trip card from the Atlantic and Gulf District.
2. Any crew member found aboard ships, who shipped in out
ports or after hours, and who does not have a trip card from one
of the districts affihated with the SIU, shall be lined up by the of­
ficial contacting the ship.
3. The district which first dispatches a man and has his trip
card duplicate on file, shall receive all revenues paid upon that trip
card.
4. A trip card man who has paid dues on his trip card, shall
pay dues and assessments to the district which issued the card.
1. 5. Trip card men, in good standing with their organization, deffiring to become a member of a different district, may do so pro­
vided he is acceptable and makes .application to that pai'ticular
Idistrict.
" 6. When a trip card man becomes a member of another district
Othef than the district which originally issued the card, the district
joining the man shall notify the respective headquarters of the
•frahsfer.
1

CaiUciing Dues On Trip Cards

•:''V

I'S;-

1. Trip card men shall pay in advance the Strike and Organiigatidnai Assessment ($5), the Annual Strike Assessment ($3), and
the Current Months Dues ($2), a total of $10. The collection of these
monies shall be left to the discretion of the local union officials.
2. After the completion of one voyage of 30 days or more, and
upon recommendation for membership, the trip card man shall pay
&lt;in addition to the payments listed in paragraph 1) a $10 initiation
fee, $2 hospital and burial assessment qnd sufficient dues to bring
him paid up to the current month.

Transfers Into the Atlantic &amp; Gulf District:

rf!^

h-;:

'i. Any member in good standing of any District may transfer
to ^y other district affiliated with the International, subject to the
^;jprovisions and rules of the respective districts. However, no mem-ber shall be forced to transfer from one district to another as long
^is he remains in good standing in his original District.
2. A man applying for a transfer must be a full book member
of his Original District. This means that Probationary members are
•not eligible for transfer.
8. The applicant for transfer must have paid all current assess•menis and the current month's dues to his original District. If the
applicant has paid dues ahead in his original district, these dues are
..not credited to the Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, and he must begin pay'«ng monthly dues from the moment of his transfer into the new
.'©istrict.
• 4. The applicant shall pay to the Atlantic &amp; Gulf District the
.following monies at time of transfer:
Current Strike &amp; Organizational Assessment
$ 5.00
, • *Current Annual Strike Asse,s.sment
3.00
•'Current Hospital, Burial &amp; Shipwreck Assessment
2.00
Transfer Fee
i
1.00
Current Month's Dues
2.00
•Tp'TAL

:

$13.00

Transfers into the Sailors Union of the Pacific:

AFL Pres. Winiam Green, Pres. Frederick Crawford of the
National Association of Manufacturers and CIO Pres. Philip
Murray (1. to r.) are pictured together at the 48th Convention of
the NAM in New York. But they did not agree on postwar aims.
While Green and Murray called for full employment after the
war, Crawford ,asked for "freedom from labor leaders."

LEAVE HER JOHNNIE,
LEAVE HER
(Paraphrase on Yankee Clipper Sea Chantey)
I thought I heard the seamen say
{Leave her, Johnnie, leave her)
Our NMU leaders turn us gray
{It's time for lis to leave her.)
The ships stuck fast for many a year
{Leave her, Johnnie, leave her)
Leave her to Browder with a big Bronx cheer
{It's time for us to leave her.)
Her bottoms gone, her planks cue warped
{Leave her, Johnnie, leave fjer)
Her finger men have the seamen marked
{It's time for us to leave her.)
„
They can neither steer, nor luff, nor wear
{Leave /xr, Johnnie, leave her)
The Star of Moscow is their only care
{It's time for us to leave her.)
Her running riggings carried away
{Leave her, Johnnie, leave her)
The Browder lubbers are there to stay
{It's time for us to leave her.)

- ,: . _

The trip was short tho the years were long
{Leave her, Johnnie, leave her)
Their hot air windy gales were strong
{It's time for us to leave her.)
t

' TOTAL
1
$15,00
4. Applicant must have paid, all current assessments and cur­
rent month's dues to his original District. If he paid dues in ad­
vance to his original District, these dues are not credited to the
SUP' alhd he must start payinig dues to the SUP from the moment
of his transfer.

So Sing Ahoy may we never be
{Leave her, Johnnie, leave her)
On a finky ship and a Moscow sea
{It's time for us to leave her.)

Requirehaents the same as those of the SUP.
^•Current, means the year in which man transfers.)

/

I

I

MAIL IN AGENT'S
OFFICE-NEW YORK

1. Same as paragraph one under the Atlantic &amp; Gulf District.
2. Applicant must have been a member of a District affiliated
with the International, and must haye been a member for one year.
3. Applicant shall pay to the SUP at time of transfer, the fol­
lowing monies;
•Current General Fund Assessment
I
$ 5.00
•Current Organizational &amp; Legislative Assessment
5.00
•Current Hospital, Burial &amp; Shipwreck Assessment
2.00
Transfer Fee
1
1.00
Current Month's Dues
,
2.00

transfers into the Pacific District:

parties. If such an arrangement
is impracticable, the case shall be
decided by the Public Health
Service" officer who has been ap­
pointed as port medical repre­
sentative. A seaman if rejected
may appeal the decision to the
medical director, representing the
United States Public Health Ser­
vice and the War Shipping Ad­
ministration, whose decision shall
be final.
^
10. All reports of signing Oil
medical examinations are to te
made on a form approved by
the medical director of the War
Shipping Administration. A re­
port of each medical examination
shall be retained by the exam­
ining medical officer; a copy shall
also be forwarded to the medical
director of the War Shipping Ad­
ministration as he requires. Re­
ports of physical examir^tions
shall be treated as confidential In
accordance with the regulations
of the United States Publio
Health Service.
11. The effective date of this
order is January 1, 1944.
E. S. LAND, Administrator
War Shipping
Administration
r t
.\

1

Tho their speeches blew the ship stuck fast
{Leave her, Johnnie, leave her)
For men get wise to their game at last
{It's time for us to leave her.)

—Top 'n Lift
NOTE: This Chantey, was sung when coming into port. It WM a
ritual used to serve notice on the Old Man that the crew were
leaving the ship and didn't intend to stay on her.

Arruda, Seafuro M.
Berwick, Louis
Cheatham, Harry (2)
Christensen, Martin
Denman, Frank
Driver, W. A.
Engquist, E. T.
Farmer, Richard E.
Feber, Leo
Fitzgerald, Neil
Figueoa, Jose
Glenn, E. T.
Hamby, Clyde
Harmon, Neal (2)
Hauke, Adam
Hesselrope, H. A.
Hillmer, Harry
Kaney, William B.
Kelley, Jesse
Kischner, B. M.
Klauber, Perry
Kliderman, Steve
Klieger, Harry
Kust, Andrew
Lukkarila, Edwin
O'Brien, James
Osterberg, Albert A.
Perkins, Walter
Peterson, Eric
Rogan, Norbert
Sanchez, L.
Seda, Angel
Sliterman, Harold
Sokolowski, Alexander
Spencer, WiUiam L. (2)
Starrbrough, Donald M,
Turner, S. D.
Van Duyne, James A.
Zippriam, Patrick W. (2)

WhSnfTa ™|
SCAB?

"After the God had finished the
rattlesnake, the toad, the vam*
pire, H® had some awful eubstance left with which he made
a scab. A scab is a two-legged
animal with a corkscrew soul—
a water-logged brain, a combin­
ation backbone made of Jelly
and glue."—Jack London.

Keep In Touch With
Your Draft Board

I

(

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A "LOG" HEADLINE REVIEW OF 1943&#13;
BANKERS LOANED GERMANY SEVEN BILLIONS&#13;
DRAFT INFORMATION&#13;
ADMIRAL LAND ISSUES MEDICAL EXAM RULES&#13;
LAKES SIU WARNS RAILROADS ON SCABS&#13;
SIU HERO LAUDED ON RETURN TO SEA&#13;
SIU FISHERMEN'S STRIKE SPREADS&#13;
RULES ON ISSUING TRIP CARDS, COLLECTION OF DUES, OK'ING TRANSFERS&#13;
LEAVE HER JOHNNIE, LEAVE HER&#13;
WHAT IS A SCAB?</text>
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&gt; • .' - .,

•

.^^•'^'

' "w^

OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OP NORTH AMERICA
No. 1

NEW YORK, N.Y., FRIDAY. JANUARY 7, 1944

Vol. VI,

NMU Begs War Labor Board
For Seafarers' Conditions
Read The NMU "Demands" Read This Break Down Of Comparative
And Compare With SIU Conditions And Then Decide For YourContract On The Right Self Who Works For American Seamen

;m

Ml

\\

CONTRACT - NATIONAL CONTRACT - SEAFARERS
INTERNATIONAL UNION
MARITIME UNION
Hiring Hall and Medical Exams:

Here IsH^at The Union Wants
(Prepared b.y Vice-President Howard McKenzle,
Chairni'aa NeKotiating Committee)
I. GENERAL CONDITIONS
' h'
through the Union "Hall for all ratings.
,2. No more physical examinations by company doctors but by
the U,^, Public Health'Service.
^
f *
3. Increase, in subsistence allowance to $7.50 per day for rooifa
and meals.
•
II. OVERTIME
1. Deck Department
a) 85c per hour to be paid after 5. p.m. and before 8 a.m. oh
week days for rigging up, handling or securing cargo gear, b) Over­
time for laying dunnage, including first layer, c) Overtime for chipping, scaling, priming or painting! enclosed alleyways, midships or
paralleling crews • quarters,-, messrdoms, pantry or laundry in all
focsles, lavoratories, washrooms, lockers and storerooms not usqd'byDeck Department, d) Overtime for handling Stewards or Engine
Room stores on dock or aboard ship, e) Bosun's pay to be increased
to that of Assistant' Electrician.
2. Engine Department
, ,
a) Overtime to Oilers, -Firemen, IVatertenders aiid Electricians
: on watch in_ port after -5 p.m: and before 8 a.m. on .week days while
cargo is being worked, b) Wages'of the Deck Engineer and Ma1 chinist placed in the same bracket as Assistant Electiician.
. 3. Stewards Department
a), 8 hours in 12 pn passenger and troop ships.' b) An additional
J man placed on Liberty ships as Night Cook and Baker.' c) Manning
I scale to be increased on ships carrying troops, d) The different wage
j scales in different companies on passenger ships or troop ships to be
1 checked on and a proper scale set that will apply on all ships in all
I companies. This an example of equal pay for equal iwork.
&gt; 4. Overtime applying to all Departments
a) Overtime at sea for everybody required to "work on Saturday
I afternoon, Sundays or. holidays.
ia WAGE INCREASES TO EVERYBODY
BASED ON INCENTIVE PAY PLAN
1. $450 to be paid to each member of the crew for a year's con­
tinuous service qn the same vesisel, to be computed as follows:
a) $45-extra for the first 3 months, b) $90 extra for the next 8
months, c) $136 for the. next 3 months^ d) $180 for the final 3 months
of the year.
»
. .
.
V J

IV. MAINTENAN&lt;:E OF UNION MEMBERSHIP
In order to maintain union membership in wartime and to insure
.that in the shuffle aboard ships caused by wartime conditio^A we
don't have thousands of new people in. the industry taking a tree ride
on the backs of those who are paying their dues to the Union, we are
requesting that the dues be deducted from- the payroll at thio tlnie of
pay-off and forwarded to the Union by the company. This will insure
thjttt every member pays his dues and will, enable the patrolmen to
detote all of' their time to settling beefs instead of devoting most
of their time collecting dues and the rest of their time chasing chiaelers and company stooges who are trying to get a free ride at the
expense of flie members who do pay their does.
"pieae are ^ main issues and should be sufficient for all new]
members to know what we are seeking. Will all officials b«trdlBg
•hjP" please^ STO that these simpIiCed demands are placed on every i
ship 80
dont toot^nrselres«at
saying the same thing over and 1

Terjgg^n in the PILOT.

t

'

'

Lanford to Persian Gulf
Captain Lanford, New York Port Captain for the Mississippi
Line, has been assigned to Persia by the War Shipping Adminis­
tration. Lanford is a toiigh bargainer with the unions—a fair
one. He always deals the cards above the table. We wish him luck
in his new post.

The Employer agrees that only members of tho
Union shall be employed in all unlicensed person­
nel ratings.
The Employer agrees to secure all unlicensed
personnel through the offices of the Union when
said personnel are available.
The Union agrees that the Company shall have
the right of rejeciien of personnel Ihey consider
NMU asks for SIU provisions. See "General unsuitable with the understanding that if the Union considers the cause of rejection unjust the
Conditions" of McKenzie's demands, reprinted Company agrees to endeavor to reach a satisfac­
from Dec. 17th Pilot on the left.
tory settlen^t with the parties involved, namely,
the Executive of the department involved, t£3~
Business Agent of the Union and the member or
members in question. If an amicable settlement
cannot he reached by this method, the medier is
to he immediately referred to the Port Committee
prescribed for in section 5 of this agreement for
final settlement.
In the event any decision of the Company Phy­
sician is challenged b yihe Union as to the physi­
cal fitness of a Union member, said member shall
be re-examined by a Public Health Physician and
his decision shall be binding.

Overtime (all departments)
.85 per hour
Room and Meal Allowance:

.90 per hour

When hoard is not furnished unlicensed mem­
•When board is not furnished, unlicensed mem­ bers of the crew shall receive the following B1«
bers of the crew shaU receive the following al­
lowance:
lowances:
Seventy-live Cent {7Sc) per meal.
(a) in lieu of breakfast
$.60
When
men are required to sleep ashore. Two
(b) in lieu of dinner
60
Dollars
($2.00)
shall he allowed tor room.
(c) in lieu of supper
60
When men are i-equired to sleep ashore, two
dollars ($2.00) shall be allowed for room.

Working Cargo Gear:

Rigging up or securing cargo gear shall he dono
by the watch on deck between the hours of 8 A.M.
Asking SIU conditions—see subsection (a), of and 5 P.M. weekdays and 8 A.M. to 12 Noon Sat­
Deck Department demands in Pilot clipping on urdays without payment of overtime. Overtime
col. 1.
shall be paid to the watch on deck tor such work
performed after 5 PJM. and before 8 A.M. and on
Saturday afternoons. Sundays and holidays.
{Continued on Page 2)

{Continued on Page 2)

THE FAKERS ARE EXPOSED
The NMU officials own
records show that they have
tried to saddle the seamen with
compulsory medical examinations
so stiff that the average man
over thirty years could not pass
t.
There is a reason for this. The

NMU doesn't want the old-time
seamen in its ranks -and it doesn't want them in the industry!
For the NMU officials have plot­
ted to deliver the newcomers—
the trainees — and the younger
seamen into a Government-ship­
owner controlled labor front for

a price: That the NMU is made
the only "representative" of the
seamen.
To this end they have man­
euvered and connived with the ,
politicians in Washington and
with certain officials of the WSA
{Continued on Page 2)

fl

�iB :

' Page Two

THE

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

Affilcaled with the Americm Federation of Labor

------- Secy-Treas.

P. O. Box 25, Station P., New York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE - - - Washington Rep.
424 5th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.

Directory of Branches
BRANCH

ADDRESS

PHONE

NEW YORK (4)
2 Stons St
BOwHng Green 9-3437
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Cay St
Calvert 4539
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St.
Lombard 7651
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS (16) .,321 Chartres St
Canal 3336
SAVANNAH
,218 East Bay St
Savannah 3-1728
TAMPA
.423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St
Dial 2-1392
PUERTO RICO..
45 Ponce de Leon
Puerto de Tierra
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
Galveston 2-8043
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway... Ft. Lauderdale 1601

PUBLICATION OFFICE:
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8346
»267

Dushane's Report
MARITIME
!&gt; WAR EMERGENCY BOARD
Decisions made during the
month of November are as fol­
lows:
- C. Hsher — SIU, Patrolman.
^N.Y.—S.S. Winfield Scott—Crew
claimed bonus for Oran on
and for Gela, on
Board has
ruled that vessel was in Selerno
Bay on
and that bonus was
paid for this date. Vessel was
not at Gela on
, board is
now trying to get more informa­
tion on this case.
A. C. Dynarski—SIU, Patrol­
man, N.Y.—S.S. Grace AbbottCrew's claim for bonus is the
Thames Estuary. Board ruled
that there was no enemy attack
Ion this date.
Jack Dwyer—SUP. Patrolman,
N.Y. — S.S. James V/bitcomb—
Crew claimed bonus in Algiers
for attack during
to
Board ruled bonus payable. S.S.
Lewis Morris alleged attack for
Oran,
Board states that
from the information that they
have there was no attack on this
date, therefore no bonus is pay­
able.
J. H. Volpin—SIU, Patrolman,
.N.Y. — S.S. Pepperell — Crew
claimed bonus while in London
:
and
Board ruled no
bonus payable for
or
on this vessel, as it did not ar­
rive in London until
A. C. Dynarski — SlU, Patrol­
man. N.Y.^S.S. George Oendleton—Crew claimed attack bonus
for Thames Estuary, on
Board ruled that there was no
attack, on this date, no bonus
payable.
J. H. Volpin—SIU, Patrolman,
N.Y. — S.S. Kofresi — Crew
claimed bonus for attack on Bone
To
Board ruled that
there was an attack that occured
outside of the harbor limits, and
therefore no bonus is payable.
Having the board check further
on this case.

Friday, January 7, 1944

NMU Begs War Labor Board
NMU CONTRACT
Laying Dunnage:.
Asking SIU conditions—see subsection (b) of
Deck Department demands in Pilot clipping.

------ "President

110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

LOG

{Continued from Page 1),

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
OP NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
HARRY LUNDEBERG

SEAFARERS

SIU CONTRACT
{Contimied from Page 1)
When the crew are required to actually lay
dunnage fsr cargc, Ihcy shsl! be paid at the legular overtime rate for such work. This does not
mean handling dunnage in order to clean holds,
but only refers io actual flooring off with dun­
nage for cargo.

Chipping, Painting, Etc.:

,..if

(a) In all ports, members of ihe Deck Depart­
ment may be required to chip, sougee, scale,
prime and paint the vessel over sides.
(b) Overtime shall be paid when sailors are
required, either )n port or at sea, to chip, sougee,
scale, prime or peiint galley, pantry, saloon, living
quarters, forecastles, lavatories and wash rooms
which are not used by the Unlicensed Deck De­
Asking SIU conditions—see subsection (c) of partment. This shall also apply to all enclosed
Deck Department demands in Pilot clipping on passageways amidships with doors or bulkheads
Col. 1.
at both ends, but does not apply to passageways
regularly used as part of quarters by Unlicensed
Deck Personnel, or passageways used as part of
quarters jointly by Unlicensed Deck Personnel
and another department of the Unlicensed Per­
sonnel.
(c) In ports where the Company employs a reg­
ular shore gang for the purpose of performing this
work, this practice shall not be interfered with.

Handling Stewards or Engine Stores.
Sailors may be required to handle deck stores
both on the dock and on board ship during their
; i.LliJi'l Ijjitl i.iiii
(.
regular hours without payment of overtime. Reg­
ular hours are defined to mean 8 A.M. to 12 Noon
and 1 P.M. to 5 P.M. weekdays and 8 A.M. to 12
Noon Saturdays.
When sailors are required to handle Stewards'
Asking SIU conditions—see subsection (d) of or Engine Room stores, both on dock and aboard
Deck Department demands in Pilot clipping on ship, they shall be paid overtime at the regular
overtime rates.
Col. 1.
Daily supplies of fresh provisions, such as milk,
bread and vegetables shall be brought aboard by
sailors when required to do so without payment of
overtime.
Ship's officers shall determine the number of
sailors to be used in handling ship's stores.
The Company reserves the right at any time to
use shore gangs to handle ship's stores.

L. J. Bollinger — SIU, Patrol­
man, N. Y.—S.S. Thomas Reed—
Crew claimed bonus for attack on
London,
Board ruled that
this vessel was not in London on
this date, therefore no bonus is
payable.
J. Sheehan — SIU, Patrolman,
N.Y. — S.S. Lawton B. Evans —
Crew claimed bonus for attack Bosun*s Pay:
on Gela, on following date
Coastwise
$105.00
to
to
,
to
Deepsea
$112.50
Board has ruled that an attack
occured at Gela between
and
, and .company claims A.B.*s Pay:
bonus was paid. Vessel was at
Coastwise .
$ 92.50
Bizerta
to
, company
Deepsea .....
$100.00
claims bonus was paid.
R. W. Sweeney — SIU, Patrol­ Overtime for Blackgang:
man, N.Y.—S.S. Marymar—Crew
claimed bonus for alleged attack
on London,
Board has ruled
that there was an attack on this
date, and states that the vessel
was in the Thames Estuary on
this date, therefoi'e no bonus is
payable.
P. Maniscalco — SUP, Patrol­
man, S.F.—S.S. Cape Romaine
Crew claimed bonus for alleged
attack on the port of Purvis Bay,
Florida Island,
Board has
ruled that they have been unable
to get confirmation of an attack
on this date from the Navy, Com­
Asking SIU conditions-L-see subsection (a) of
pany or the Officers. Therefore Engine Department demands in Pilot clipping.
no bonus is payable.
J. Sheehan — SIU, Patrolman.
N.Y.—S.S. Oremar—Crew claim­
ed bonus attack for alleged at­
tack on London between
and
also attack bonus in
Thames Estuary,
Board
has ruled that crew is entitled to
attack bonus for
while in
London, however, board has rul­
ed that crew is not entitled to
an attack bonus for the Thames
Estuary as the vessel left the
Estuary on
P. Maniscalco — SUP, Patrol­
man, SJ".—B.S. Charles G. Curtis
—Crew claimed bonus attack
while in anchorage off of Catania,
{Continued on Page 4)
{Continued on Page 3)

Majority of SIU contracts provide
Bosun with
Minority of SIU contracts provide

$117.50
$112.50

Majority of SIU contracts
Minority of SIU contracts

$110.00
$100.00

VESSELS CARRYING DECK ENGINEER:
When cargo is being worked with ship's
winches after 5 P.M. on arrival day, the deck en­
gineer shall oil winches and look after the deck
machinery until Midnight: after Midnight an oiler
shall be detailed to oil winches and look after
deck machinery until 8 A.M.
On other than arrival days a deck engineer
shall oil winches and look after the deck machin­
ery between the hours of 8 A.M. and 5 P.M.
In the event a deck engineer is not available
or obtainable an oiler may be assigned to his,
duties. If an oiled is not available Or obtainaMe
any member of the Engine Department, with
oiler's qualifications, may be assigned by the en­
gineer in charge.
It shall be the duty of the deck engineer io turn
the steam on deck and prepare the winches for
working cargo.
Either the wateriender or fireman, but not both,
shall receive overtime while cargo is being work­
ed with ihe ship's winches at all times between
Ihe hours of 5 P.M. and 8 A.M. and on Saturday
afternoons. Sundays and Holidays.
In port, firemen or watertenders, but not both,
shall maintain a regular donkey watch between
the hours of live (5) P.M. and eight (8) A.M. with­
out payment of overtime except as provided in
this section. On Saturday afternoons. Sundays or
Holidays, they shall receive the regular overtime
rate. Donkey watches shall be maintained for. the
purposes of keeping • steam for ihe auxiliaries,,
winches, and the safety of the ship.
When vessel arrives on Saturday before Noor
4 hours shall constitute thte K^lar day's wbxk foi|
all members of the Engine Department.
{Continued on Page 3)

�Friday. January 7. 1944

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

NMU Begs War Labor Board
II I

NMU CONTRACT
(Continued from Page 2)

NMU Asking SIU Conditions

SIU CONTRACT
(Continued front Page 2)
VESSELS CARRYING 3 FIREMEN OR
3 FIREMEN-WATERTENDERS AND 3
OILERS AND NO DECK ENGINEER:
On days of arrival, if cargo is lo be worked with
ship's winches after five (5) P.M., firemen and
oilers shall remain on sea watches until Midnight.
The oilers shall take care of the winches at all
times while in port, if being used to work cargo,
and the firemen shall lake care of the entire plant
while the oiler is on deck attending winches.
When watches are broken and cargo is worked
with ship's winches after 5 P.M. and before 8
A.M., it shall be the duty of the oilers, as assigned
by the chief engineer, or engineer in charge, to
put in lime in addition to their regular day's work
for the purpose of oiling winches, and they sh^
be paid at the regular overtime rate while per­
forming such work after 5 P.M. and before 8 A.M.,
and on Saturday afternoons, Sundays and Holi­
days.
In the event an oiler is not available or obtain­
able, any member of the Engine Department with
oiler's qualifications may substitute for the oiler.
It shall be the duty of the oiler to turn the
steam on deck and prepare the winches for work­
ing cargo.
Both the oiler and the fireman shall receive
overtime while cargo is being worked with the
ship's winches at all times between the hours of
five (5) P.M. and before eight (8) A.M. and on
Saturday afternoons, Sundays and Holidays.
When vessel arrives on Saturday before Noon,
four (4) hours shall constitute the regular day's
work for all members of the Engine Department.
In port, firemen shall maintain a regular don­
key watch between the hours of five (5) P.M. and
eight (8) A.M. without payment of overtime ex­
cept as provided in this section. On_Saturday af­
ternoons, Sundays or Holidays, they shall receive
the regular overtime rale; donkey watches shall
be maintained for the purposes of keeping steam
for the auxiliaries, winches, and the safety of the
ship.
ELECTRICIAN'S OVERTIME:
While cargo is being worked with electrical
winches after 5 P.M. and before 8 A.M., after 12
Noon Saturdays and on Sunday and Holidays,
overtime shall be paid to electrician on duty.

Longshore Work:

NMU asks for SIU provisions. But NMU has the
following finky clause:
In those outports where there are no regular
longshoremen available, members of the crew
may. be required to drive winches for handling
cargo, or may be required to handle cargo. For
such work performed during their regular work­
ing hours, they shall be paid in addition to their
regular monthly wages, at the rate of 70c per
hour; and for such work performed during over­
time hours they shall be paid at one and one-half
times the overtime rate. The phrase "regular
working hours" means men on regular straight
time and is not restricted to men on sea watches.
This section shall not be so construed as to be
applicable to any work "where longshoremen are
not available due to labor trouble.

IHeal Hours:
The meal hours for the Unlicensed Personnel
employed on vessels of the Company shall be as
follows:
Breakfast ;
7:30 A.M. to 8:30 A.M.
Dinner
11:30 A.M. to 12:30 P.M.
Supper
5:00 P.M. to 6:00 P.M.
These hours may be varied but such variation
shall not exceed one hour either way, provided
that one unbroken hour for meals shall be allow­
ed. This paragraph, however, shall not apply to
men on watch.
Where the full njeal hour as provided in the
agreement cannot be given owing to navigation
of the vessel, particularly tying-up and letting go,
extra compensation at the overtime rate will be
allowed for the portion of the meal hotu not
granted. For example, if a man is given fifteen
thihutes to eat he will receive extra compensation
•for forty-five minutes in lieu of the full meal
hour.

(Continued on Page 4)

In those ports where there are no longshoremen
available, members of the crew may be required,
for the purpose of handling cargo, to drive
winches or may be required to handle cargo. For
such work performed, they shall be paid in addi­
tion to their regular monthly wages. One Dollar
ten cents ($1.10) per hour for their watch on deck
and One Dollar and Sixty-five Cents ($1.85) for
the watch below.
' After 5 P.M. and before 8 A.M. and on Saturday
afternoons, Sundays or Holidays, the rate shall be
Three Dollars ($3.00) per hour for all hands so
engaged.
This section shall not be construed as to be ap
plicable lo any work where longshoremen are not
available, due to labor trouble.

Paga Threa

Fakers Are Exposed
(Continued from Page 1)
as well as with some of the ship­
owners!
In order to do this, however,
the NMU officials and the Stalin­
ists have tried to introduce the
"check-off" of union dues from
their membership. Note demand
Number 4 in Pilot clipping. This
is one of their greatest confes­
sions of weakness. They have no
real union strength because no
sentiment for unionism remains
within their ranks.
The Pilot has pleaded that the
"check-off" is necessary because
the NMU patrolmen are unable
to settle beefs. For the NMU
patrolmen and delegates have
been reduced to combination
Pilot peddlers and book sales­
men, who shake the collection
can on the side for causes the
Stahnists deem "worthy" at any
particular moment.
AND IN THE PROCESS THE
SEAMEN ARE MILKED FOR
MILLIONS OF DOLLARS!
It is fast becoming a by-word
on NMU ships that "If you look
under your bunk out will pop an
NMU delegate with a (so-called)
'ship's library' and a collection
can to shake John seaman down."
The delegates' "shop-talk" in
the NMU headquarters is about
how many of the so-called "li­
braries" they've sold and how it
left them no time to settle the
beefs.
It's small wonder the NMU
wants the "check-off" — but for
what?
It will aid their Pilot peddling;
book selling; can shaking, and
what-have-you—but it won't set­
tle the seamen's beefs under the
NMU's cheesecloth pacts with the
shipowners. Because they pro­
vide nothing. The shipowners run
through 'em and get satisfaction
and countless millions in profit;
the NMU's sickly Port Commit­
tee gets the beefs; and John
working seamen gets exactly—
NOTHING!

any man on the job it is Trade
Unionism upside down — with
the worker on the bottom! And
getting it in the neck!"
On the other hand the SIU's
agreements fully protect their
members. The-rules as shown by
the table.s herewith provide many
conditions in the industry that
the fast-failing NMU has never
been able to obtain.
And through their failure to
gain conditions of overtime for
the seamen they have put mil­
lions into the pockets of the ship­
owners in unpaid overtime; as
well as countless more millions
into the shipowners' coffers
through lower wage scales—and
therefor lower war bonuses. Fur­
ther they have saved the oper­
ators other millions through lack
of job conditions on ships under
contract to the NMU.
And in passing it might be
said that while Curran and his
misfit outfit have blasted the old
ISU, the ISU as far back as the &gt;
year 1920 had conditions which
the NMU has never been able to
approach. For the working rules
of an ISU agreement of 1920-21
provided overtime for OT hours,
weekends and holidays at the
overtime rate. Here's an ex­
ample:
5. While vessel is in port and
members of the engine room
department are standing don­
key watch, no work shall be
performed which is not part of
their, regular duties; between
the hours of 5 p.m. and 8 a.m.
or vessel is working cargo or
solid ballast, extra compensa­
tion to be paid at the overtime
rate. When cargo winches and
engine room auxiliaries, other
than feed pumps or injectors,
are being used an oiler, watertender or engineer will also be
on watch. On steamers not
carrying a donkeyman, the
work to be performed by a
fireman.
6. No unlicensed employee in
the engine department shall go
on watch unless he shall have
had six hours off duty immedi­
ately preceding the setting of
watches. If sea watches are set
at 12 midnight, the unlicensed
employees in the engine de­
partment, required for the
first watch, shall not be work­
ed later than the -previous
noon.

Curran, like the rest of the
Stalin phobes in the NMU is a
man with the unique talent for
always being wrong. And the
further wrong he goes the loud­
er he screams and reflects the
desperation of the NMU in gen­
eral. For Curran has the Pilot
with which to howl loud and
long and run a line character as­
The AFL unions are the only
sassination and turn the NMU's
consistent defeats into slyly group which have lived up to
The meal hours for the Unlicensed Personnel written headlines which would the aims of these pioneers of
employed in'the Deck and Engine Departments give the seamen the impression marine unionism. The NMyers
and the Stalinists for all their
of great victories.
shall h( as follows:
high-powered blasting and prop­
Breakfast
7:30 A.M. to 8:30 A.M.
But
the
seamen
know
better!
aganda
have never been able to
Dinner
11:30 A.M. to 12:30 P.M.
No
one
can
fool
them
because
equal
these
provisions—and they
Supper
5:00 P.M. to 6:00 PJd.
they work on the job and know never will be able to!
(a) At sea the 4 to 8 Watch shall relieve itself
the conditions and wages under
for supper.
But since they cannot, they
(b) The 12 to 4 watch on sailing day is to be which they live!
scream loudly of "their" achieve­
One
ex-NMU
member,
while
knocked off at 11 A.M. in order to eat at 11:30
ments for the seamen, thump
A.M. and to be ready to go on watch at 12 Noon. turning his book in for an SIU their chests and call oiu*ses upon
book the other day, summed up
....(c) These hours may be varied, but sUch varia­
the AFL and the officials of its
tions shall not exceed one hour either way, pro­ the Pilot rather neatly. Said he: affiliated marine unions which
vided that one unbroken hour shall be allowed at
"I'm tired of reading about have done a job instructed by
all times for dinner and supper when vessel is in
the 'great victories' in the Pil­ their memberships.
port. When watches are broken, if one unbroken
ot's headlines. Victories the
hour is not given the man involved shall receive
members never get! That's The NMU pact has some fairly
one (1) hoiar's overtime, in lieu thereof. This pen­
why I'm joining a real union, decent conditions which the AFL
alty hour shall be in addition lo the actual over­
the AFL's SIU. The Pilot is a unions pioneered and standard­
time worked during the meal hour.
continual education in ignor­ ized in the industry and which
(d) When crew is called to work overtime be­
ance: Ignorance of the sea­ the shipowners had to concede to
fore breeikfast and work contin aes after -7:30 A.M.
men's problems; ignorance of the fast-failing, misfit NMU offi­
a full hour shall be allowed for breakfast and if
the Trade Union movement as cials to enable them to ram the
breakfast is not served until 8:00 A.M. overtime
a whole, and ignorance of hu­ NMU-shipowner combine's rot­
shall continue straight through until breakfast is
man beings."
ten working conditions down the
served.
"The NMU officials call it
'trade unionism.' But to me or
(Continued on Page 4)
(Continued on Page 4)

J .

. .'c fj

�Page Four

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, January 7, 1944

l;V"
I'-'

Begs War Labor Board
Washington Report NMU
NMU CONTRACT
SIU CONTRACT
(Confintied from Page 2)
flaring
and
Board has
^ated that the company paid an
jattack bonus during this period.
The above cases wind up all
.bonus claims that have been set­
tled for the month of November.
It is interesting to note that sevieral of these claims were settled
by the board with statements
•that the vessels were not in the
areas on the dates submitted in
the disputes. I am of the opinion
that the crews could be able to
give the union further assistance
in getting prompt settlement if
they could get newspaper clip­
pings of the areas where the at­
tacks occur. We would then be
in a position to prove to the
Ijoard that an attack actually oc­
curred, and we would not have
to rely on government or Com­
pany officials. If a newspaper
account of any attack can be se­
cured, send the complete page in­
to the agent's office so that he
will have the date line, and city
of the paper's establishment.
TRANSPORTING CREWS
The KMC has sent out the fol­
lowing communication to all
their port representatives. Dated
tlecember 24, 1943:
"1. When a maritime labor
union recognized in Instruction
No. 32 is unable to supply a spe­
cific number of men in specific

ratings for a specific ship, you
are, upon request of the union,
to provide transportation for ex­
perienced men of that union from
the nearest port.
"2. The above provision is ap­
plicable to men in the entry
ratings.
"3. The men referred to shall
be secured from the port nearest
to the one at which they are to
be utilized.
"4. The handling of such or­
ders shall be cleared through the
regional office in accordance
with instruction No. 25."
It should be noted that the
above order limits the transpor­
tation of men to the nearest port
where the shortage may occur.
This is contrary to our agree­
ments. The Union is to supply
me nto all ships that the Union
has contracts with. In the event
that the union cannot supply the
required amount of men and it
will cause a delay of a vessel.
The operator then has the right
to secure the men needed to fill
the shortage. Our contracts do
not limit us to the nearest port
only, the Union has the whole
coast at its disposal to get the
men. If we do not stick to this
proposition, it will only be a
short time when our vessels will
be completely manned by non­
union men.

Fakers Are Exposed

I
IJ'JV

{Continued from Page 3)
of the seamen still adher­
ing to the NMU.
The NMU "agreement", if it
can be called that, is not remai-kable for what it says—^buit it is
remarkable for WHAT IT DOES
NOT SAY, and for the overtime
jmd general conditions sacrificed
to shipowners.
For in these provisions the
SrU betters the NMU pacts by
'having it on the line—in black
and white — as to what their
members shall be paid for. In
other respects the agreements
with the shipowners throughout
the industry are pretty much the
same on general and department­
al conditions not shown, with
the exception that where over­
time is provided the SIU OT rate
is better in all cases.
Because of this and the NMU's
ioud howls that "their contracts
Were the best in the industry"
ihe NMU officials ^vere forced
lately into a corner by the re­
maining NMU membership —
they must put up, or else . . .
Their scream was frantic! What
could they do! They appealed to
the shipowners and found "no
soap" as well as having "no cof­
fee time." Thus they started the
.old pattern all over agaia and
jfittaeked the opposition unions,
the AFL, accusing them of all the
acts that they, themselves, were
^ilty of.
But the seamen know better!
They are not being fooled a bit.
^hey know that the SIU is the
extension of the SUP of the AFL
•^^ne of the oldest marine -unions
in the Nation, which was found­
ed by Andrew Furuseth: the man
the shipowners couldn't buy and
feculd not use because of his
.Trade Union principles, and be,cause. he would not let them de­
fame his name while he yet
lived,
Jifc.;'

{Coniinned from Page 5)

Division of Wages:

When members of the Unlicensed Personnel are
required to do extra work because a vessel sailed
without the full complement required by the ves­
sel's certificate, under eircumstances where the
la*r permits such sailing, the wages of the absent
seaman shall be divided among the seamen who
perform his work, but no overtime shall be in­
cluded in such wages.

Uniforms:
When quartermasters are required to furnish
their own uniforms, they shall be paid three dol­
lars ($3.00) per month in addition to their regular
wages.

Paint Spray Guns:
No Provisions
Docking and Undocking:

Relieving Helmsnum:
No Provisions

^

ARMAND RIOUX
Please communicale with Rich­
ard M. Canton, 51 Chamber St.,
Arrivals and Departures (ov^time)
N.Y.C., immediately in regard to
Commencement of Port Time for tne Engine
settlement of your case.
Department on freight and passenger vessels, at
the next half hour or hour after the vessel is
properly secured alongside the dock, or when the
vessel anchors for the purpose of loading or dis­
Deck-Engine Dept. who lost charging cargo, and "Finished with Engines" is
Personal effects on SS Samuel rung.
Griffin can now collect claim at
termination of Port Time for the Engine De­
99 John St. See Mr. Paulson, partment on freight and passenger vessels, when
WSA Claim Dept.
"Stand By" is rung.

MONEY DUE

(a) When members of the Unlicensed Person*
nei are required io do extra work because the
vessel sailed without the full complement requir*
ed by the vessel's certificate, under circumstances
where the law permits such sailing, the wages of
the absent members shall be divided among the
men who performed their work, but no overtime
shall be included in such payments.
(b) At sea, when day men are switched to see
watches and promoted for the purpose of replac*
ing men who are injured or sick, they shall re­
ceive the differential in pay and overtime for all
watches stood on Saturday afternoons, Sundays*
or Holidays.
(c) When men standing sea watches are pro­
moted for the purpose of replacing men who are
injured or sick, they shall receive the differential
in pay only.
(d) But in no event shall any member of the
Unlicensed Personnel work more than eight (8)
hours in any one day without the payment of
overtime and when overtime is paid for mora
than eight (8) hours' work because of absent mem­
bers, there shall be no division of absent members' wages.
In cases where uniforms are required by the
Company for the Unlicensed Personnel, they shall
be furnished and paid for by the Company; or in
the event a man is required to furnish his own
uniform, he shall be paid an additional Ten Dollars $10.00) per month for same.
When members of the crew are required to use
paint spray guns they shall be paid at the regu­
lar overtime rate during straight time hours and
at the rate of time and one-half the overtime rata
during overtime hours.

Yet, the Stalinists in the NMU
and a few charity fakers in the
Umted Seamen's Services have
tried to usurp his name and
memory by naming a so-called
When members of the watch below are called
"club" after him under semion
to assist in docking or undocking the vessel
Government auspices.
they shall be paid for such work at the regular
The old seamen are not fooled.
overtime rate.
The young seamen are learning.
The trainees lately come into the
industry are taking advantage of
the real Trade Union principles
offered by the SIU. Thousands of
them have joined the AFL unions
for their ability to fight for con­
ditions on the job. Thousands Carpenter Work:
more are coming.
How about you. Brother?
For this is the answer to the
No Provisions
NMU's cry for "stabilization" of
which they couldn't get through li.iuiii iiiifiiiiilii
!tli
llui illi
union strength; this is the an­
swer to the NMU's flash public­
ity job: "The NMU—What it is
Bosun or Carpenter Standing Watch ^
—^What it Does."
The seamen see the answer to
No Provisions
the first "What it is?" and reply
"NOTHING"; to the "What it
does?" they also reply "NOTH­ Sounding Bilges:
ING."
But the SIU in the estimation
of all seamen, young and old is
No Provisions
SOMETHING that will fight the
seamen's battle here on in.

HSOH«/S

{Continued from rage 5)

When men off watch are called upon to assist
in docking or undocking, they shall be paid for
such work at the regular overtime rate.
All hands in the Deck Department are to be
used in docking and undocking when available.
The watch on deck shall receive overtime for
docking and undocking after 5 P.M. and before 8
A.M. weekdays, and on Saturday afternoons, Sun­
days and holidays.
When it is necessary to put sailors on the dock
to catch or let go lines, those actually going on
the dock shall receive One Dollar ($1.00) for each
instance. This is in addition to overtime if they
are on overtime at the time.
When members of the Deck Department are re­
quired to do cjtrpenter work, they shall be paid af
the rate of eighty cents (80c) for watch on deck
and One. Dollar and Twenty Cents. ($1.20) per
hour for watch below. On vessels where no car­
penter is carried, only boatswain shall handle
ground tackle.
If the Boatswain or Carpenter are required to
stand watch due to shortage of men, they shaU
receive overtime for all watches stood on Satur­
day afternoons, Sundays and holidays*
When members of the Deck Department are re­
quired to sound bilges after 5 P.M. and before 8
A.M., and on Saturday afternoons, Sundays and
holidays, they shall be paid for such work at the
regular overtime rate.
Any seaman covered by this agreement assign­
ed to regular wheelman's duties shall not be re­
lieved for sougeeing, chipping, painting, shining
brass and cleaning work during the regular wheel j
watch.

./I
A'Hvals and Departures, Saturday Afternooz
Sundays, and Holidays: Vessels arri'ving in
on Saturday afternoons, Sundays or Holidayil
Overtime shall begin when "Finished with En-{
gine" bell is rung.
Vessels departing for sea on Saturday after­
noons, Sundays or Holidays: Overtime shall be
paid up until the "Ahead or Astern" bell is rung.

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NMU BEGS WAR LABOR BOARD FOR SEAFARERS' CONDITIONS&#13;
LANFORD TO PERSIAN GULF&#13;
THE FAKERS ARE EXPOSED&#13;
DUSHANE'S REPORT&#13;
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                    <text>^ OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA
NEW YORK, N. Y.. FRIDAY. JANUARY 21, 1944

Vol. VI.

No. 2

AFL Spurns 'Draft Labor' Plan,
Urges Congress To Defeat It
ITALIAN LABOR LEADER RAPS
RED TACTICS IN SHIP CASE
Charges that Communist fol­
lowers were using "deplorable
conditions" faced by the crew of
the Italian liner SATURNIA,
which reached New York harbor
a short time ago after a dramatic
escape from the Nazi-dominated
North Italian harbor of Trieste,
to give a false pictui-e of Ameri­
can democracy and to create a
machinery for interfering in the
politics of war-torn Italy, were
made yesterday by Luigi Antonini, President of the Italian-Am­
erican Labor Council.
Mr. Antonini, who is first VicePresident of the International La­
dies' Garment Workers' Union,
stated:
''The Communist press and the
general press' unfarhiliar with the
facts are being mobilized to take
advantage of the deplorable con­
ditions under which the crew of
the Italian liner SATURNIA are

living in New York harbor, to
discredit American institutions
and government agencies and
democratic organizations like the
Italian-American Labor Council.
The SATURNIA, in an epic dash
from Nazi-dominated Trieste, re­
cently escaped to the haven of
America to take part in the Uni­
ted Nations victory drive.
"We of the Italian-American
Labor Council have sent tele­
grams to the President, Secretary
of State, the Secretary of the
Navy, the Department of Justice
and the War Shipping Adminis­
tration, appealing to them to do
something so that the crew of the
SATURNIA might be granted de­
cent living and working conditionsT 'The Navy has laeeh very
helpful. We are sure that the
American authorities are intent
upon cleaning up this unhappy
situatiopn. But Communist Party

followers are using the justified
discontent and unrest in the SATURNIA's crew and aggravating
it for purely political advantage.
It is our feeling that they plan to
use the contacts just created to
smuggle Communist literature
and agents to Italy,
"We have been informed that
members of the SATURNIA's
crew who recently attended a
meeting of the Italian-American
Labor Council, addressed by Mat­
thew Woll, Vice-President of the
American Federation of Labor,
have been mysteriously jailed."
"Vincent Bello, Executive Di­
rector of the Italian - American
Labor Council, said that he had
received information that a Com­
munist member of the crew sar­
castically told the arrested sail­
ors that they had followed the
wrong track when they went to
the Council meeting."

Green Warns FDR Proposal
Will Not Prevent Strikes;
Sees Democracy Menaced
Washington, D. C.—President William Green express­
ed the American Federation of Labor's "resolute" oppositioni
to President Roosevelt's proposal for a "draft labor" law oni |
the grounds that such legislation will not prevent strikes^ '
will not solve manpower problems and threatens to "under­
mine our basic concepts of democracy."

• Following this sweeping public
declaration, Mr. Green wired
every member of Congress urg­
ing defeat of the new and rev­
olutionary proposal.
At the same time he called on
all organizations affiliated with
the American Federation of La­
bor to conununicate their opposi­
tion
to the plan to their Repre- ,
Corporation profits for the
sentatives
and Senators in Con­
third quarter of 1943 were the
gress.
highest for any similar period in
the history of America, the De­ The President's recommenda­
partment of Commerce reported tion for a National Service
was submitted to Congress in his
this week.
annual
message along with four
After deducting all taxes and
other
measures
designed to curb
other charges, the department
said, profits were "slightly more food price increases through Fed­
than $2,000,000,000," or 6 per cent eral subsidies and to tax war
above the 1942 quarter, the pre­ profits more heavily.
Immediate reaction on Capitol
vious all-time high.
Hill
indicated that Congress would
Business as a whole will smash
refuse
to enact any portion of the
all records for the year, with
President's
recommendations ex­
profits, after taxes, of more than
cept
those
dealing
with extension
$8,000,000,000. This is double
of
the
Economic
Stabilization
Act
what they were in the last peace­
A letter which is all the more time year of 1939, considered and continuing the profit renego­
Long hours and other wartime caU a conference of labor com­ dramatic because of the things pretty good for business.
tiation clauses of the tax law.
missioners
with
representatives
Virtually ignoring the Presi­
which
it
does
not
say,
rather
than
working conditions must give
For the first nine months for
of
the
Government
agencies
con­
dent's
message, the Senate pro­
what
it
says,
has
been
received
way to peacetime standards as
which figures are available, prof­
cerned to "determine methods for by John Hawk, Secretary-Treas­
ceeded
with consideration of a
its have risen 11 per cent over
soon as war production demands returning to peacetime standards
urer.
1942,
after
already approved by the
the same period of
permit in order to stabilize post­ as^ rapidly as possible."
House,
which
wiU fall far short
The letter follows:
payment of taxes.
war industry and employment for
of
the
goal
set
by Roosevelt.
Wartime exemptions to State
Nov. 26th, 1943
UP FASTER THAN TAXES
Members
of
Congress
privately
civilian war workers and return­ and Federal hours laws must be Dear Bro. Hawk:
Commenting on these figures,
expressed
the
opinion
that
there
ing soldiers, according to Secre­
Just
to
let
you
know
that
I
and
the "American Federationist,"
kept temporary and subject to
tary of Labor Perkins.
the rest of the members here are publication of the American Fed­ was not the slightest chance of
immediate readjustment as war in the best of health and hope eration of Labor, declared that r®"" voting drastic tax increases
With war industries approach­
^ election year.
ing peak production and some needs shift, labor and Govern­ that everything is going on "what has happened is that the
SUBSIDIES IN JEOPARDY
war contract cutbacks already in ment officials agree. They are smooth back there. There isn't corporations have boosted their
effect, the need to blueprint the convinced that exemptions must very much that a fellow can incomes faster than the taxes Also, there appeared to be lit­
steps for an orderly reconversion be eliminated altogether as soon write about from here, as one have gone up—in an effort to tle hope of Congress approving a
day is pretty much the same as pass their tax load on to others," substantial food subsidy program.
to peacetime labor standards as practicable.
another. I am the Barrack Cap­ and it added that some corpora­ The President asked for a billiongrows more urgent.
Action has been taken on ap­ tain of the American Group in
"Emergency demands for over­ proximately 30,000 applications this camp and have been such tions have admitted that this was dollar program but unless there
time and for additional shifts are from 12,000 firms for exemptions ever since we have been together. their purpose, though not in is a sudden shift of sentiment on
Capitol Hill Congress will cut the
temporary," Secretary Perkins from various labor laws in 34 I'll try to send you a photo of those words.
As
a
matter
of
cold
statistics,
authorization
to at least half that
'said, "and they must not be ex­ States since the beginning of the most of this group if 1 can get
the
fact
is
that,
while
war
taxes
figure,
if
it
approves
subsidies at
tended beyond actual production war period. Secretary Perkins one.
are
high,
many
corporations
have
all.
requirements. It wouW be trag­ reported recently to the National Well, this is about all I can
The President emphasized in
ically .short-sighted of us to al­ Conference on Labor Legislation. think of at present, so I'll close actually evaded the payment of
a
single
penny,
since
what
they
his
message that his five-point
low the war emergency to be The firms, not all of them war wishing everyone a Merry Xmas
have
been
permitted
to
retain,
program
formed a "just and
used as a means of undermining contractors, applied for permis­ and Happy New Year, also lots
after
squaring
their
account
with
equitable
whole" and added that
our labor standards which are sion to work in excess of the of luck from everyone here.
the
government,
is
much
greater
he
would
not recommend a Na­
the cornerstone of this Nation's maximum hours law, to employ
I remain
than
they
could
possibly
earn
in
tional
Service
Act unless the
tremendous production ability women at night or for longer
JOHN MONTEVERDE,
peacetime,
the
"Federationist"
other
laws
were
passed to pre-,
and staying power."
hours, or to employ minors be­
Book No. 156, G. 140
declared.
vent undue profits, to keep down
Anticipating further changes in yond the limitations of existing My prisoner of war No. is 2998. "The pledge of no new war the cost of living and to hold the
war production during 1944, la- legislation. Most States have Have sent photo to my sister, millionaires has been forgotten," stabilization line.
• bor. leaders have joined with granted such exemptions for lim­ Mrs. Gladlys Mortins, No. 417 it said. "What the corporations Because of this proviso in his j; ll
"State labor commissioners and ited periods after investigation Montgomery St., Savannah, Ga., have done is not only pass their message, anti-Administration
Federal labor officials in asking has proved that they are neces- and requested her to send you a tax burden onto the public, but forces expressed the cynical bethe.U. S. Department of Labor to sai*y for the war effort.
copy.
to double their profits in addition.
{Continued on Page 4)

fr

War Standards Must End
With Peace, Perkins Warns

0'

mm-

'•ft;

• • tf.,V

-'V-...
Lj-v-.SrT^

Prisoner Of War
Writes To Hawk

—

War Profits
Hit Record
Peaks

�Page Two

THE

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

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

HARRY LUNDEBERG

------ President

110 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

------- Secy-Treas,

P. O. Box 25, Station P., New York City

MATTHEW DUSHANE

- - - Washington Rep.

424 5th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
www

Directory of Branches
ADDRESS

BRANCH

PHONE

NEW YORK (4)
2 Stone St.
BOwHng Green 9-3437
BOSTON (10)
..330 Atlantic Ave
Liberty 4057
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Gay St
Calvert 4539
PHILADELPHIA
6 North 6th St
Lombard 7651
NORFOLK
25 Commercial PI
Norfolk 4-1083
NEW ORLEANS (16) ..321 Chartres St
Canal 3336
'I
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St
Savannah 3-1728
TAMPA
423 East Piatt St
Tampa MM-1323
MOBILE
55 So. Conception St.. ... Dial 2-1392
PUERTO RICO
....45 Ponce de Leon
.Puerto de Tierra
GALVESTON
219 20th Street
Galvestoii 2-8043
FT. LAUDERDALE
2021 S. Federal Highway. . .Ft. Lauderdale 1601
W

W

SB

PUBLICATION OFFICE:
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwUng Green 9-8344
267

License To Profiteer
The tory Republican-vpolltax Dem&lt;x:rat alliance that
is now running'Congress is a rich man's party. It-has con­
sistently favored capital as against labor, the rich as against
the few as against the many, on nearly every is­
sue it has handled.
The tax legislation it has initiated and passed has been
particularly scandalous for its class character, in the midst
of a war that calls for all groups to pull their full weight
in. the spirit of national unity.
But there has been one curb on the worst excesses of
war profiteering, beyond the present inadequate taxes with
all their loopholes.
This has been the Renegotiation Act of 1942, under
which the government is empowered to renegotiate with
war contractors, when it finds they are making excessive
profits.
Under this act, some $5,300,000,000 has been recov­
ered or saved for the American people through the re­
writing of w^ar contracts.

Profits Double 1939 Figure
Despite this measure and war taxation generally, the
profit-makers have been doing very nicely, thank you. In
fact, corporation profits, after all taxes, are now more
than twice as high as they were in 1939.
But now come the House and Senate Finance Com1^" inittees with proposals to change the renegotiation regu­
lations in such a way as to "open the way to truly extor­
tionate profits," according to Treasury Secretary Morgenthau.
To say, as Morgenthau does, that these changes "hold
the seed of a national scandal," is to put it mildly.

Labor's Anger Soars

[I':

There is already scandalous profiteering in this war,
and if still further license is given for even worse profit­
eering, the indignation of labor, our fighting men and the
American people generally will know no bounds.
There may be no limits to the arrogance of the tory
clique that has usurped control of Congress, but there are
limits to the patience of the American people, as the next
elections may show if real curbs are not enforced or war
jprofiteering.
—Labor News Service
' V'"'; -

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, January 21, 1944

fRtPOT?T OI\ «
WASHItVGTOrV.
MARITIME
sub-paragraph (3), Paragraph C This plan extends far beyond the
WAR EMERGENCY BOARD
of Article VI and whose repatria­ scope of Industrial Mobilization
Decisions made during the tion commenced prior to Feb­ (M) Plan of 1936 and 1939. No. 1.
month of December are as fol­ ruary 1, 1944, shall be entitled to They have taken over the Rail*
any bonus payable for the period roads. What segment of the
lows:
J. Megan—SIU Agi., Boston— up to and including January 31, Transportation Industry is next?
DISCRIMINATION:
SS Henry Jocelyn—Claim for at­ 1944, from the operator of the
tack bonus in London during the repatriating vessel. (Dated Janu­ Certain pressure groups are
trying to force this issue now
period from October 12, to Octo­ ary 8, 1944).
AU agents and patrolman are that the Government has taken
ber 20, 1943. Board ruled port at­
tack bonus of $125.00 payable to cautioned to fully acquaint them­ over the railroads. Here is what
selves with these two latest de­ they are trying to put over. "The
crew members of this vessel.
cisions by the board so that you railroads previously had refused
J. Sheehan — SIU Patrolman.
can avoid headaches in the pay­ to abide by the committee's or­
N. Y.—S.S. Charles M. Schwab—
der to cease discrimination. Cer­
Claim for attack bonus in London off.
GOVT. SEIZURE?
tification of the cases to the
during the period from Novem­
.
Over
a
year
ago,
H.
Lunde­
President
is under the same pro­
ber 2, to November 13, 1943berg,
J.
Hawk,
M.
Wcisborger,
cedure
as
certification of War
Board ruled port attack bonus of
M.
D.
Biggs,
and
your
truly
met
Labor
Board
orders by which
125.00 is payable to crew mem­
with
officials
of
the
War
Depart­
management
or
Unions refuse to
bers of this vessel.
ment over a dispute on some of abide. Enforcement methods in­
A. C. Dynarski — SIU Patrol­
man, N. Y.—SS Elezar Wheelock the Eastern scows that the Army clude abolition of Union privil­
—Claims for attack bonus in Mal­ had under their jurisdiction. We eges. seizure of plants or with­
ta during the period from July were firmly told at this confer­ holding of Government contracts.
30, to August 5," 1943. Board ruled ence that the War Department It looks like stormy weather
had a plan all worked out to ahead boys, so we had better post
that no attack bonus is payable,
take
over all Transportation. some extra lookouts.
they state that this vessel was at
sea during this period.
A. Burke—SUP Patrolman, SJ.
—SS Young America—Claim for
attack bonus on Makin Island on
November 27, 1943. Also SS Cape
Martin—SS'Island Mail. Board
has ruled that crews of these ves­
Not a single vessel of the Am­ zation, WSA, Washington, D.C.,sels are entitled to attack bonus erican or Allied Nations mer­ reported that only five delays
of $125.00.
chant fleets missed her sailing were caused by temporary crew
J. H. Volpin—SIU Patrolman. date on the Atlantic Coast be­ shortages on all three coasts, in
N. Y.—SS Andrew G. Curtin— cause of crew shortage during contrast to seven American and
Claim for attack bonus in Lon­ the critical holiday period from ten Allied Nations ship delays in
don during the period from Oct­ December 15 to today, according United States ports a year ago,
ober 6, to October 17, 1943. Board to Craig S. Vincent, Atlantic when the merchant fleet was only
ruled port attack bonus of $125.00 Coast Representative of Recruit­ half its present size.
ment and Manning Organization, The report covers aU types of
is payable to crew members.
War
Shipping Administration vessels manned by civilian crews,
J. Sheehan — SIU Patrolman,
(WSA),
37 Broadway, New York. including Army Transport Ser­
N. Y.—SS Marie Moloney—Claim
Extraordinary
efforts were vice troop ships, as well as the
for attack bonus in London dur­
made
by
WSA,^aritime
unions familiar libertys and tankers.
ing period from October 24, to^
and
operating
companies
to
pre­ Panamanian, Honduran and Phil­
November 11, 1943. Board ruled
vent
any
break
in
the
flow
of ippine flag ships operated by
attack bonus of $125.00 is payable
vital
materials
to
our
fighting
WSA also are included.
to crew members.
fronts.
"The need for mates, licensed
AMENDMENT 1 TO
Marshall E. Dimock, Assistant engineers and Able Seamen, nev­
DECISION 2" A.
Deputy Administrator for Re­ ertheless continues to be acute,"
Paragraph D of Article IV of cruitment and Manning Organi­ Mr. Vincent said.
Decision 2 A is repealed effective
at 12:01 A.M., February 1, 1944.
Therefore, bonus payments in
connection with vessels putting
into a port within the continential bmits of the United States
under the circumstances set forth
in pai'agrapb D will start and Editor, Log;
Shipmates and Brothers:
stop in accordance with the pro­
visions of paragraph A and B I noticed in the Decem,ber issue Am making a second appeal
respectively of article VI. (Dated of the Pilot that they are return­ (which will probably be the last)
1-8-44).
ing to old fashioned farming for Richard McKee of 92 Pleas­
ant St., Dorchester, Mass., who
AMENDMENT 2 TO
methods in a nice sort of a way. contracted tuberculosis in Jack­
DECISION 2 A
Under a notice to the men on
Paragraph C of Article VI of the Standard Tankers, Isthmian sonville, Fla., jail when doing 30
decision 2A is hereby amended Line, and Army Transports, the days for picket line activity. He
by adding the following sub­ men are advised to apply at their is now at Mattapan Sanitorium,
while his aged and destitute
paragraph:
nearest NMU Hall and be ser­ mother is bedridden at their;
"(4) A crew member repatriat­ viced.
home with malignant ulcers.
ed aftfer occurance of an event
We, all of us know that being They receive $6.00 a week for
specified in sub-paragraph (3) of
the two of them when Richard is
this paragraph C is not entitled serviced is. Remember back on home with his mother.
to bonus from his original vessel the farm when the old man used
My first caU for aid for him in
during repatriation. If such crew to take old Betsy, the family cow October of 1941 brought in from
member signs on as a replace­ over to the neighbor's bull to be five or six ships crews, through'
ment in the crew of the repatriat­ serviced in a large way.
tarpauling musters, 165.00. Think
ing vessel. If such crew member It's common knowledge on the what we could do now if we all
signs on as workaway on the re­ waterfront that the membership have our hearts in the right
patriating vessel, he shall not be of the NMU have been getting a place, which I hope we have.
entitled to bonus for the repa­ first class job of servicihg done
All mail should, be sent regis­
triating vessel."
on them ever since the Commies tered, or through telegraph, to
This amendment 2 to Decision took over, but we never thought
2 A shall be effective at 12:01 that they would go to the trouble Mrs. Anna C. McKee, or Richard
A.M. of February 1, 1944; provid­ of advertising it. But then won­ McKee, 92 Pleasant Street, Dor­
chester, Mass.
ed, however, that a crew member ders never cease.
O. FAGERTWEDT,
repatriated as a workaway after
BUD RAY, No. 647
occurance of an event specified in
SUP. No. 18«*

No Crew Shortages Held
Up Ships Over Holidays

i

�T
Friday, January 21. 1944

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

These Books Are At Baltimore
/
These Union Books are at the Elvis Higdon
David Hendry
/ Baltimore Branch:
»
Hame
No. Paul Hunt
Howard Hockman
A
Nicholas F. Auld
29470 Wm. Howsare
[ Ernest Avant
27809 Shyle Hollo^ay 1........!.^.
J
Olaf Andersen
27976
Arne Arnesen
21610 Henry Jenkins
Gerald Anderson
28541 Fred A, Jones
Alphonse James
B
Louis Beaty
26472 David B. Johnston
George T. Barelord
6993 H. Jobe
R. Branstrom
28536 John Jeffrey
Walter Bendle
27098 Wm. Jones
K
Smokey Ball
...;. 28006
Arthur Brandon
29137 A. Koszow
Edward Bender
29138 John Kavanaugh
L
James Brinkley
28546
Edward Berger
27639 Edward Lewis
Wm. Baumer
29244 A. Lingenfelter
Gale Barr
29489 S. Lashley
E. Bugaj
29228 J. F. Latimer
John Bunten
29490 Geo. M. Lucas
Jack R. Beam
29140 Rudy R. Lopez
Raymond Burton
29139 Ed. H. Lynch
Joseph Blaher
29301 O. C. Lindsey
j! Jack Burt
5761 A. H. Lawer
M
' Harold Burke ...^
1077
Walter Broil
28545 Chas. Meyers
MOITIS Brickley
28549 L. Melton
Hubert Britt
29300 Wm. Morris, Jr
Leon Malczyk
C
G. R. Craig
,
29229 Jas. L. Martin
Angol Ciniano
26981 Ed. C. Martin
Franklyn Coombs
25818 Chas. E. Mitchell
Elwood Canty
3313 J. L. Millner
Francis Carberry
28553 Rafael Macos
Lansing E. Chase
28645 Chas. Metzger
Harry Cheatham
21859 Robt. Mortirrier
Samuel Chew
28108 M. Michelson
Leo Cunningham
23167 Philip Marshall
Mc
Willie Carrington
25011
John
McGuigan
'Calvin M. Curry
27638
Kenneth E. Cooney
25231 S. S. McGavin
Jacob H. Coogins
24954 Joe McGuire
G. C. Cobler
.'.
29227 Ed. McShane
L. McGee
D
N
William Davis
28641
Lionel G. De Haven
28327 Hans Neilsen
Wm. J. Dennis,,
29143 K. R. Nichols
Eugene Duarte
26816 Robt. W. Niebrugge
O
Chas. Davis
28538
Tony
Ofsian
Eldon Driver
20222
\ Cortez Demetrio
.....:
3404 David J. O'Dell
Pat. J. Donahue
22951 F. J. Orscheln
John J. Dembrowski
26930 Martin J. O'Connor
Willard F. Day
29466 Chas. Omohundro
Arthur Dickerscn
22223 D. A. O'Connor
P
E
Martin Echoltz
28544 Edward Pike
George Evans
26175 Urner M. Perry
Francis Prout
F
Harold R. Freeberg
28632 Curtis R. Parker
Grmel Fleet
21582 Richard Painter
Chancey V. Farmer
26334 H. H. Pagerkopp
Donald Fewkes
29330 F. H. Paschang
Eugene Fleischer
28783 Frank Peann
Audrey A. Felts28781 Harry Plowman
Elwood A. Fogel
29142 Andrew Paul
R
Charles E. Feltman
28558
Francis Fowler
28773 Wm. Robbins
Allen L. Ferguson
25388 H. C. Rivers
Fred Froedge
3872 Albert Reganus
Milton S. Fall
29495 Ben. J. Ruffin
Donald Rohrbeck
G
Andrew Gangle
25831 Jos. O. Roy
Charlie V. Gladhill
24871 Juan Rodriques
Hemsley Guinier
27209 Ben. Rusk
Henry Gibbs
26934 Douglass Ripley
Uriah Grant
27295 Wm. Robey
George F. Greene
28540 K. Raines
Sam C. Graham
26874 Jos. Repasky
Martin Gallagher
26933 Werter Roberts
S
Samuel Grubb
27870
Raymond Skinner
H
Claudio A. Hernandez
26817 F. Sinkovich
Geo. Hawkes
29145 E. C. Sengebusch
Fred O. Hart
28326 Tom Slack
Geo. Huntzicker
28199 E. H. Steinshelter
Arte Hromin
23795 Geo. Steen, Jr
James Harrington
25773 J. S. SorenSen
Frank Holland
29481 R. M. Schaeffer
Arthur E. Huhn
29234 S. Sadowski
Harry Huber
29235 Wm. Siejack
-Charle.s W. Homer
27908 Wm. Solomon
\ Robert P. Harrison
28127 D. Smith
Y Charles F. Helbig
25402 J. D. Stefano
1'Cha^. Hamilton
:.. 27341 H. C. Steffen
Je Hergenhahn
23628 C. P. Swerengen

u

•»

G-182
24769
27989
28126
27986
2665^
4825
26821
28198
21169
29483
29469
29233
10301
28780
26942
26943
4839
27973
28638
28542
2360
25847
29306

E. E. Stewart
Wm. H. Serens
B. Swealkoski
Alec Searle
J. A. Sumpter
Al. Silver
E. Sharpe
Andy Smelko
H. R. SuUivan
Robt. Shepard
P. Shenley
M. Scarpinati
Ralph Spray
W. Sanderson
T
Jos. Taylor
Lonnie Tickel
A. L. Thompson
Chester Turner
Chas. Teddes
Robt. J. Taylor
Jessie M. Taylor
Michael Torbick
C. Tilgmman
V
Ed. J. Vogel
A. C. Valentine
Frank Verrier
Robert J. Vilagi
W
Walter Wentling
H. E. Willoughby
T. N. Weber
Omer Ward
Robert Williams
Wm. E. Wannall, Jr
John C. Ward
J. E. Waris
Z
John Zerovnick

23622
26954
27918
28678
26820
24786
27894
22823
25694
222
28662
29107
28032
6295
,

V&amp;-"

28688
28663
29440
26961
26959
26110
28842
28686
29579

Page Three

Around The Ports
SAVANNAH
Shipping in this, port has been
damn good. In fact I have been
so busy lately I have been on the
run continously looking for men
and the way things look now I
will continue to be just as busy
for the next month. Have had a
hard time trying to find ABs for
the ships I have had out around
here. There seems to be a scar­
city of ABs around this port. If
things continue as they have been
lately I will be able to use all
the ABs I can get my hands on,
in fact I would like to see some
ABs around here right now.
Have ships coming out on the

19th and 26th of this month and
on the 3rd of February, so far as
I know now. Have a few regis­
tered in the black gang but will
be needing rrien with ratings in
all 3 departments to man these
vessels. Since the holidays are
over, maybe some of the oldtimers will be getting down this
way again to register for ship­
ping. Hope so anyway because I
will be able to use every man I
can get my hands on this month.
Don't have many ships coming in
but have plenty going out and
surely do hope to see some of the
old-timers down this way soon.
Steady as she goes,
CHARLES WAID, Agent

Senate Body Hits Tactics
Of Employers On Coast

28934
G-7
28218
Washington, D. C.—The Senate Civil Liberties Com­
1
29354 mittee charged that organized employers have deliberately
28206
253
attempted to sabotage collective bargaining in Los Angeles
29135
29357
and
have unduly interfered with it in San Francisco.
29365
27892
The charges were contained in the sixth and seventh
28845
29368
20742 sections of a report by the com-^ficial.s.
28329
6367 mittee to the United States Sen26079
"The very spectacle of a local
29372 ate on extensive investigations chamber of commerce, compris­
29356
28689 into West Coast conditions over ing the sum total of the business
27885
the last decade. The committee
G-105
26791
influence in the community, ac­
is composed of Senators Robert
28784
tually dictating and stimulating
6135 M. LaFollette and Elbert D. the development of tactic after
5737
Thomas.
5393
tactic to defeat the national la­
In Los Angeles the committee bor policy, made anything but
found that "the most influential the strongest measures protective
28390
business and financial
interests of labor's civil rights seem futile.
28782
26452 Crew which made the last trip have deliberately attempted to The creation and maintenance of
26648 on the SS Joseph Wheeler have sabotage the national labor pol­ this policy of antiunionism in
29225 $125 port attack bonus money icy of collective bargaining as Los Angeles for magnitude" and"'*'
coming to them. Collect at South expressed in the National Labor versatility of the effort far sur­
^25125 Atlantic Steamship Line, 17 Bat­ Relations Act." The report add­ passes anything the committee •
ed:
28131 tery Place.
has previously encountered in its
27049
• • •
"Despite the enactment of that four-year inquiry."
Crew which was on SS Robert law and its declared constitution­ The committee noted that the
1858 Hunter on November 10, 1943, ality by the United States Su­ city of Los Angeles, famed dvu28208 have $125 port attack bonus com­ preme Coiu-t, these business and ing the 1930's as a stronghold of
29138 ing. Collect at South Atlantic industrial leaders determined to antiunion industry, presented in
28683 Steamship Line, 17 Battery Place. nullify it not only by negative its most intense form the prob­
21991
but also by positive action. Pur­ lems which are prevalent in
»
»
»
24436 Crew which was on SS Wil­ suant to this determination, they other urban and industrial areas,
liam R. Davie on November 1st, engaged in a series of organized where influential forces domin­
27870 1943, are entitled to $125 port at­ conspiracies to destroy labor's ating the entire community re­
29324 tack bonus money. Collect at civil liberties. They sought to fused to accept the national labor
21856 South Atlantic Steamship Line, prevent bona fide collective bar­ policy. In its final statement on
28709 17 Battery Place.
gaining from obtaining a strong the importance of this issue, the
24870
* • *
foothold in the urban commun­ committee report stated:
29131
"Los Angeles is but a symbol
Crew which was on SS Wil­ ity of Los Angeles and its tribu­
29358 liam R. Davie on September 6, tary business and agricultural of many other areas in various
28151 1943, have $125 port attack bonus areas.
parts of the nation where the ex25855 money coming to them.
"To carry out their conspiracy, ercise of labor's rights and the
28674
they set up various employers'| practice of collective bargaining
associations and auxiliary groups are met with hostility of an or­
29221
of women, consumers, agricul­ ganized 'community' character,
3267
turists, and even employes. They engendered by strong industrial
28707
lavishly financed these organisa­ or agricultural groups."
27801
tions and for the most part sup­
The report on San Francisco
27978
plied them with a type of pro­ disclosed a transition from an or­
WILLIAM FOLEY
3005
fessional personnel that by rea­ ganized employer policy of out­
2361 Get in touch with your mother, son of their background was right and open antagonism to
27821 Mrs. W. Foley, 1555 Constance wholly out of sympathy with collective bargaining to one in
27499 Street, New Orleans, La.
trade-unionism. They concluded which organized industry avow­
» • »
28685
alliances with the local press, lo­ edly accepted the procedures of
23443
cal police, local law-enforcement collective bargaining but sought
JAMES A. SWEENEY
27883
officials, and local business or­ to nullify them. Despite the fact
4159 Please contact vour wife, Vir­ ganizations. Behind their illegal that collective bargaining sub­
ginia at 2375 Ivc .oe Street, Den­ and anti-social policy they con­ stantially became the operating
29232 ver, Colorado.
centrated economic and political basis for employer-employe re­
• • •
29353
power that defied any local ap­ lationships in San Francisco in
29305
plication of the law and custom the latter half of the last decade,
MIKE DIKUN
146
of the nation."
the committee noted:
28681 The certificate of identification
Another significant aspect of
"The collective - bargaining
28677 and fireman's certificate of effici­ the conclusions of the committee rights of large and important
28217 ency of Mike Dikun was turned report was the determination, elements of labor in San Fran­
28687 in to the Philadelphia Branch of based upon the record, that the cisco, although recognized in col­
27538 the SIU, 8 North 8th Street. Also anti-labor activities of the or­ lective agreements even before
27630 his 'Seamen's Passport and other ganized employers were backed the passage of the National La­
28679 papers. His SIU of N.A. Book No. and sponsored by other groups in bor Relations Act, have been per­
28846 25275 is also here.
the city such as the banking and sistently subjected to a variety of
27593
financial groups, certain leaders undue interferences stemming
Keep In Touch With of
28216
the local press, and, until re­ from organized employer influ­
cently, many of the public of- ence."
26606
Your Draft Board

MONEY DUE

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Pa9» F^ I

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. M

THE

These Books Are At Norfolk

SEAFARERS

LOG

f'^tK "N

Friday, January 21. 1944

Pioneer SIU Ship Wins Praise
As *The Work Horse Of The Sea*

. These Union Books are at Nor­ N. H. Pfankuch
... 28889
folk Branch,
Donald D. Payton .
27925
No. L. E. Parker
28837
A
The S.S. George Washington, pioneer SIU ship, re-«
Aurice li Arkerson
6226 Joseph Ross
28010
ceivcd praise this ^ week as a "real work horse of the sea"
William H. Ashford
25349 Carol G. Ross
.. 29602
Albert Ausperk
25350 Richard Riddick
29585
and an example for other ships and crews to strive for.
B
John H. Russell
29590
Officials of the Alcoa Line, charterers of the ship, gave aa
Fred D. Bullock
7440*
S
interview to the AT. Y. Times which traced the war worl^
Alexander Barigian
29728 Cecil W. Smith
29393 Striking a blow at one of the of the ship and recounted a few*Morris Brickey
28549 Roily A. Surguy
29394 nation's pioneers in company of the narrow escapes experienc­ the majority of whom have serv­
Arthur Bellavance
6117 Stanley J. Serafin
— 29231 unionism, the U. S. circuit court ed. Following is the text of the ed on her for many years. Hep
Raymond Barrow
27999 Roger R. Spencer
29583 upheld the NLRB decision out story as it appeared in the Times master is Capt. Thomas H. Park
lawing three Standard Oil com­
C
T
of Montclair, N. J. '
on Dec. 26th:
James Christopher
29719 William A. Thompson
27916 pany-dominated unions in refin­
The
saga
of
a
real
Atlantic
When the British and other al­
Earl E. Chickering
26982 James K. Thompson
28839 eries at Bayonne; Linden and Ocean "work horse," a ship of lies leased island bases in the At­
Jersey
City,
N.
J.
Standard
still
Donald A. Cameron
27766
V
only 5,184 gross tons that has lantic to the United States, it
Floyd H. Curtis
29491 Pazely Van Millican
28838 operates company unions in the carried thousands of passengers was necessary for this country to
Pacific Northwest.
James F. Collins
26256
W
and covered more than 100,000 send the men and equipment to
Philip E. Carter
1
29531 Robert Woodin
28891 Leaders in company unionism, miles in the last^ twenty-one those places. Naval and military
Archie F. Carter
27626 Delton R. Watt
26522 the Rockefeller and Standard Oil months — the story of the S.S. personnel, as well as commercial
William Coleman
28892 Joe Winslow
3435 interests worked out the formula George Washington's great war contractors and their staffs were
R. S. Caroon
28918 Hebert M. Watson
29644 for their employes' associations contribution to this country was ferried back and forth on the
George F. Chamberlain
26666 Arthur E. Wolch
26905 after the Ludlow massacre in told here yesterday by an official ship, a task that still consumes
James A. Cartin
27157 Adrean T. West
26617 1914. With passage of the Wag­ of the Alcoa Steamship Company, most of her running time.
. Meredith Curry
26825 Esaw A. Wright
26600 ner Act in 1935, company unions charterers of the vessel.
The Alcoa Line's spokesmati
Scipio Collins
29718 Lee Wade
29378 became illegal and the NLRB The 19-year-old liner, owned mentioned two of the George
David Cardonik
29723 Louis Wyner
6122 turned thumbs down on the by the Eastern Steamship Com­ Washington's narrow escapes
Rockefeller dummies. But the
D
S
pany, has shuttled back and when she was sailing through
Ervin Dziengielewski
28109 Edward W. Stanczak
28154 company proceeded to defy the forth between the Atlantic coast dangerous waters, unarmed and
Elbert Duffy
26974 Henry Scofield
25741 board by renaming them.
and Bermuda, Trinidad and other often unescorted. He told of the
Franklin Lee Duren Jr
26851 John Stephens
28840 Two years ago the union filed important islands in the Carib­ ship, proceeding at night, coming
E
Robert Stackhouse
28923 charges of company domination bean in all sorts of weather and upon a submarine that was sur­
Floyd R. Erickson
29238 John Davis Speight
23492 of the three New Jersey dummy with a record of only negligible faced, evidently charging batter­
F
Donald P. Stafford
27919 unions.
repairs, the company spokesman ies, and how the captain hurried­
B. N. Farris
29535
said, adding that the ship has ly got away from there because
Stephen C. Freeman
26912
outfought North Atlantic gales he had a full ship and couldn't
Elue Facey
21984
that have sunk many sturdy risk even trying to ram the sub­
Fred Lindsey
29240
ships. He also told how on one marine.
Donald E. Finfrock
29717
voyage a giant wave struck the He told of another incident
G
vessel and swept her lifeboats when the liner, outward bound
Hebert Green
28630
Oh, Ihe way was dark and stormy
away.
in the Gulf of Mexico, passed her
H. Croons
29246
The George Washington is one sister ship, the Robert E. Lee,
Before we saw the Light;
Eugene Clash
29479
of the few remaining passenger which was torpedoed and sunk a
We searched in vain safe harbors
W. E. Grant
29534
vessels being operated by private short time afterward.
And wandered in the night.
Edward B. Goodwin
29533
management in this country. She
The George Washington has
Stanley P. Gondzer
25395
For truth, we hate to go to sea
was built for the New York-Nor­ helped out with domestic labor
HEurwood Gaskill
:
5470
And work we hate still more;
folk, Va., run and normally car­ shortages. Early this year, when
H
The virus politicanus Connivus
ried ^bout 300 passengers. Today the need for extra farm help be­
Robert B. Hewitt
28570
Has reached our inner core.
the valiant little ship carries 900, came serious the ship was used
Herman E. Hacker
27765
and yet breaks her own speed to bring hundreds of the natives
The vision of a shining desk
Henry W. Holifield
25412
records.
from Kingston, Jamaica, tp work
E'er swum before our ken;
Berger Hansen
3135
The vessel has a veteran crew. on American farms.
Our sterns were built for easy chairs
Benjamin E. Hayes
:
25014
To that we shout "Amen."
H
*
Lloyd L. Holland
28363
We craved a handsome briefcase
Byron S. Hanrahan, Jr
29688
With photos to grace the press.
Sylvester Halligan
28571
Our names in self praised headlines
Chester Hudgins
23097
To
these we all confess.
E. Hammond
29726
•J'i'...
Clarence J. Hodges
26386
And so we shook the honest hand.
top representatives of industry,
{Conthmed from Page 1)
I#J
Same
pledge to every one;
I. '.'.i •
labor
and agriculture unanimous­
lief
that
the
President
had
ad­
E. Jones
29747
The Right, the Left, and Center
\S- Adrian
ly
held
that "the American peo­
vanced
his
program
for
political
Paul Edward Jacks
29720
Until their "votes" were won.
ple
will
provide greater output
campaign
purposes
rather
than
in
Luke Joyner
24162
under
a
voluntary system than
'Twas then we saw an eerie light
the expectation that it would be
George J. Jamison
25411
under
one
of compulsion and
That gleamed across our way.
adopted. These spokesmen de­
Leon Jackson
&lt;..... 26596
regimentation."
For Stalin's Star had wandered far
clared that if the President's rec­
K
And we could not say "nay."
Mr. Green quoted Bernard
ommendations are rejected he
Challes Kohr
28564
Baruch as authority for the state­
could
then
place
the
onus
on
A. Allie Kemal
25120
For that light-guarded payroll
Congress for failures in the na­ ment that there can be no real
Joseph R. Kennedy
26702
Burned brightly in our sight.
comparison between drafting men
tion's war economy.
Alex Kinsey
28561
The glow was red but pay was green
26662
At any rate, except for com­ for service in the armed forces
I '••'" Arthur D. Knoll
Then walked we to the Right.
Eugene L. Knowles
27523
munist - controlled organizations, and drafting them for service in
A "Right" that spoke in terms of "left"
William E. Kennedy
29497
the trade union movement pre­ private industry, operating for
The workers to beguile.
L
sented a solid front of opposition private profit.
With twisted minds in "Workers" School
'^•Harold Larsen
G 92
to the draft proposal, although, The AFL chief emphasized that
We learned Joe Stalin's style.
Alfred G. Lovell
26999
of course, it will support more since the no-strike pledge was
Frank Liverman
28573
legislation to tax excessive war given to the President he has not
And now, as dogs at Our Masters' gate
C. B. Langley
!
28657
profits and to authorize a com­ authorized, approver or condoned
We crouch beside our bone.
a single strike. The record shows,
M
prehensive subsidy program.
And in the light from up above
William R. Moore
29226
At a conference with President he added, that not a single na­
We growl or whine or moan.
William E. Morris
26534
Roosevelt in the White House, tional strike has been put into
Harry Moore
28895
Mr. Green made it clear that the effect by any AFL affiliate since
We yelp in terms of "rank and file,"
Floyd T. Moore
:
27002
federation
will not go along with Pearl Harbor. When local strikes
We yowl of Liberty's flight.
'lEugene L. Muse
28897
him
on
a
National
Service Act. have occurred, Mr. Green said,
Democracy is ever on our lips
Dan D. Moore
25770
Mr.
Green
pointed
out in his AFL officials have exerted every
Though never in our sight.
Ed. Murphy
28898
public statement that although influence to terminate them as
We hate the very sight of work.
.'Ambrose Magdirila
22826
Great Britain has a National Ser­ quickly as possible.
Our souls were cheaply bought.
Samuel McKinley
27003
vice Act, the law has failed to The only National Service bill
We fill the air with speeches
N
stop strikes in that country.,Brit­ now before Congress is the Aus­
What wonders hath Joe wrought?
Spurgeon D. Norris
28886
ain has had more strikes, propor­ tin - Wadsworth Bill, which is
tionately, than America, he said. thoroughly objectionable to labor.
Now we are the New Jerusalem,
2947
Monford Owens
As proof that such a law will To make niatters worse, th'
Fat Christs of the Time to ome
•&gt;Gus A. Opolus
28841
not solve manpower problems, authors of this legislation revis
Come list to US ye faithful.
P
Mr. Green cited a recent report it after the President's mess,
Our Stalin's Will be Done.
^
.Alfred Parek
24214
by the War Manpower Commis­ to include a clause which wouiu^- ,;!
Oliver H. Pekkola
29220
sion's Policy Committee, in which in effect, destroy the closed shop,'i
-Top 'n^ Lift

Standard Oil Hit
On Co. Unionism

AN ODE TO FAKERS

'r

|v'

.

AFL Spurns Labor Draft,
Asks Congress To Kill It

m-

4i

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x«eir' ^ ?
i.'r i - f

.

II

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AFL SPURNS 'DRAFT LABOR' PLAN, URGES CONGRESS TO DEFEAT IT&#13;
ITALIAN LABOR LEADERS RAPS RED TACTICS IN SHIP CASE&#13;
WAR PROFITS HIT RECORD PEAKS&#13;
WAR STANDARDS MUST END WITH PEACE, PERKINS WARNS&#13;
PRISONER OF WAR WRITES TO HAWK&#13;
LICENSE TO PROFITEER &#13;
NO CREW SHORTAGES HELD UP SHIPS OVER HOLIDAYS&#13;
SENATE BODY HITS TACTICS OF EMPLOYERS ON COST&#13;
PIONEER SIU SHIP WINS PRAISE AS 'THE WORK HORSE OF THE SEA'&#13;
STANDARD OIL HIT ON CO. UNIONISM&#13;
AN ODE TO FAKERS&#13;
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^ABERS JOQ
m
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH ABIERICA
Vol. VI.

NEW YORK. N.Y., FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4. 1944

No. 3

M WEB Would Cut Our Wages
We Lose First Round
In Bro. McCune Case
D

U

In the riiidst of a war which has been largely (so far) a struggle of supply and
transportation, a war in which the heroism and self-sacrifice of the merchant seamen
made possible military operations in Europe and in the Pacific, a war in which the mer­
chant marine has suffered greater proportional casualties than has either the Army or the
Navy, a war in which civilian^
seamen voluntarily gave up the paid too much money for deliver­
security and comfort of home to ing the goods.
(Text of Nielsen's letter is con­
face storms and subs and bomb­
tained
in Dushane's column.)
ings so that the soldiers might
In
other
words, it looks as if
have bullets and food — in the
the
MWEB
has
fallen for its own
midst of such a war the Maritime
propaganda
about
the high wages
War Emergency Board is propos­
paid
merchant
seamen,
and has
ing a slash in the wages of the
set
out
to
correct
the
situation.
already underpaid merchant
What are the facts?
hero.
The United Seamen's Service
Last week the SIU received a
recently
concluded a study of
notice from Mr. Erich Nielsen,
seaman
income,
and discovered
Secretary of the MWEB, that a
that
the
annual
average
wage, in­
meeting is to be held on Febru­
cluding
bonus
and
overtime
pay­
ary 16, 1944 at which time the
ments,
is
$1,677.14.
This
means
Board will consider the fact that
"war risk compensation ... is that they are paid $32.25 per
out of line with actual risk to week! Big dough for a man with
which the seamen are subjected." a family to support. Big dough
In short, the seamen are getting to receive for undergoing the heU
of Nazi sub and air attacks. Big
dough when compared with the
millions in profits being run up
by the shipowners. Yes, we can
understand how the Washington
bureaucrats must be disturbed
over the excessive wages paid
the sfeamen, -wages "out of line
with the actual risk to which the
seamen
are subjected."
not to include this money in the
If
the
MWEB thinks that 32
loggings. It is the opinion of this
bucks a week is too much money
Union that the changing of this to pay a man for risking his life
practice at a time when the sea­ 24 hours out of 24, we wonder
men are under the severest war what they think would be an
strain would constitute a blow at adequate wage for seamen in
peace time?
{Continued on Page 4)

At this time there is no way
of knowing just how the Board
intends to cut the war risk pay­
ments— whether they intend to
eliminate certain areas, or wheth­
er they intend to keep a blanket
monthly payment but reduce it
from 100% to some lower figure.
But however they may juggle
their figures, any cutting will
mean that Joe Sailor is going to
have less than the yearly aver­
age of $32 per week he is now
receiving.
The MWEB attempts to ignore
the fact that the cost of living
has risen 124% (United Mine
Workers figiures), it attempts to
ignore the fact that the gap be­
tween labor's wage and the cost
of groceries and clothes and shel-ter has become so great that the"Little Steel Formula" is about
to be scrapped, it attempts tO:
ignore the fact that the railway
workers, the steel workers, the
aircraft workers are winning
wage increases to meet this liv^
ing crisis (and they are paid farbetter wages than are the sea­
men). The MWEB lives in a
pettyfogging, bureaucratic vac-uum which takes into account
none of the realities of life. It
only sees that wages cuts into
profits, therefore wages must be
{Continued on Page 3)

that he wanted a discharge. The
skipper refused to give him a
discharge and McCune went over
the side—only to be arrested by
the Military Police and placed in
the Army stockade at Camp Pat­
rick Henry, Virginia.
These are the" facts in the case,
and they are not denied by either
McCune Or the union. But what
is being fought is the Army's
claim to jurisdiction over McCune
—a merchant seaman. The brass
hats claim that they can court
martial him because the SIU ship
on which he worked is engaged
in carrying supplies for the arm­
The facts in the McCune case ed forces. By such reasoning the
are, briefly, that on September
{Continued on Page 3)
24, 1943 he was dispatched as
cook to a merchant ship out of
the SIU hall in Norfolk. He sign­
ed articles as cook aboard the
freighter and went to work. That
night five hundred troops were
suddenly put aboard the ship, and
McCune was informed that
henceforth he would cook for 500
nien with the staff and galley fa­ Vice Admiral R. R. Waesche
cilities tneant for 70 men. Under Commandant of the U.S. Coast
these handicaps McCune prepar­ Guard, issued a directive on Jan
ed supper for the 500 soldiers and 14, 1944 in which he called for
started to serve it when he was the inclusion of overtime in log­
informed that he would have to ging of seamen charged, for one
^elay serving until the command­ reason or another as "deserters."
ing officer had eaten first. The While this move is within the
commanding officer was not on letter of the law as it has existed
the ship, being delayed (no for a number of years, the prac­
doUDt) by some fancy cocktail tice has never been to take over­
party ashore. When McCune dis­ time from the men. Brother John
covered that the meals he had Hawk has protested to Admira!
laboriously cooked would have to Waesche this move to exact from
spoil in the galley while hungry the seamen the • "last pound of
The SUP has issued its first an­ makes an ideal vessel for train­ "We have been instrumental
soldiers walked the decks, he be­ flesh" at a time when they are nual report on the Andrew Furu- ing seamen.
too, in obtaining seamen's papers
came fed up with the \^hole brass under the severest strain and seth School of Seamanship, spon­
and
shipping electricians, deck
hat system and told the skipper danger in the performance of sored and operated by the union "The spectacular growth in the
engineers,
cooks, stewards, fire­
program and training on this
their duties.
at Pier 42, San Francisco. This ship," says the report, "is ac­ men, oilers and watertenders—^in
handsome, eight page printed re­ countable by two factors; the in­ fact, any rating that does not re­
Brother HawR's letter reads:
port, full of photographs of stu­ creasing demand for trained sea­ quire a license.
January 31, 1944 dents learning their trade abroad
men and the efficiency of the "Since its inception in August,
R. R. Waesche, Vice Admiral
the SUP training ship SS Invad­ training personnel, as well as the 1942, and up to the end of Nov­
Commandant, U.S. Coast Guard er, constitutes a damning expos­
optimal standards maintained by ember 1943, the Andrew Furuseth
Washington, D. C.
ure of those fakers and stool this school. Indicative of the School of Seamanship has the to­
pigeons and labor haters who phenomenal growth is the" fact tal of over 317,475 trainee hours
Dear Sir:
have
lately been conducting a that whei-eas in the beginning to its credit."
Merchant seamen will receive
smear
campaign against the the average enrollment was about
This school has been constant­
1
have
in
my
possession
a
copy
the same mustering out pay as
ly
under attack by the Stalinists
veterans of the armed forces, if of Navigation and Vessel Inspec­ school.
300 a month, it has now leaped
Congressman Emanuel Cellar of tion Circular No. 45, issued by This report shows that an hon­ to an average of 1,000 enrollees a and the RMO fakers who see in
. New Yoi'k has his way. He has you on January 14, 1944, the sub­ est and efficient trade union can month. To the present date we it a threat to their program of
introduced a bill in the House ject of which is "Disposition of not only train men to be better have trained approximately 8,000 training tin can sailors by the
which would pay seamen $300 if overtime earnings subject to seamen than those turned out by men, and some 5,500 have been government. The seamen know
they left the industry after the forfeiture of alleged desertion of the elaborate government schools, shipped to various ships. An av­ the difference between RMO
war, having served in foreign merchant seamen."
but can do it with less red tape erage of 60 able seamen are turn­ graduates and SS Invader gradu­
ates—as do the shipowners. The
waters.
In your directive you refer to and less cost per student. And, ed out a month.
SUP
has reprinted letters from
In introducing the legislation order 46 U.S.C. 701, and maintain most important, these graduates "We have been conducting a shipowners and skippers in which
Celler . stated that it was time that this order allows the inclu­ are conscious, proud and militant course in ships' carpentry aboard the seamanship of SS Invader
that certain Congressmen under­ sion of overtime in the logging union men!
the Schoolship. This is a course graduates receives the highest
stood the tremendous sacrifices of seamen for alleged desertion. The report tells the full story that has been supplementary to praise.
being made by the merchant sea­ 1 am fully aware that the law of the school from its inception, our regular course in seamanship. In order to assure the continued
men. He als6 revealed that the does allow the inclusion of over­ t describes the SS Invader, the We have been very successful so functioning of this school for the
present average annual wage of time pay in such forfeitures. SUP training ship which is 136 far in this training of carpenters, duration of the war, the Atlantic
the merchant searhan is only $1,- However, from the date the law feet over-all, has a 25-foot beam and have been able to produce and Gulf District of the SIU has
677il4. This figure includes bon­ was enacted the practice has been and a 13-foot draft. The ship is about 250 carpenters that are now voted to contribute $5,000 toward
uses and overtime.
for the shipping Commissioners of nickel steel construction and sailing.
the school's expense.
The union's fight to prevent the
U. S. Army from court martialing Brother Lawrence McCune
received a set-back this month
when a Norfolk civil court denied
our petition to remove McCune
from the Army's jurisdiction. Be­
cause of the importance of the
case to the entire labor move­
ment, and the precidents that
will be set by the courts' decision,
we are taking the fight to the
Circuit Court of Appeals, and
will, if necessary, take it to the
Supreme Court of the United
States.

Hawk Protests Coast Guard
Move To Include Overtime
In Forfeiture Proceeding

SUP REPORT REVEALS GROWTH OF
FURUSETH SCHOOL OF SEAMANSHIP

"Mustering Out"
Pay For Seamen
Is Proposed

V "fi" —-

-

11 I

....

�Pag© Two

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, February 4, 1944 ]
1

I
SZ'

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

mim:m

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMEmCA
Atlantic and Gnlf BIstrkt
Affiliated with the American Pedezathn of Labor

HARRY LUNDEBERG

------ Vreiiient.

110 Market Street, Saa Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

------- Secy-Treat,

P. O. Box 25, Station P., New York Qty

MATTHEW DUSHANE

- -

- Washington Rep,

'i

424 5 th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.

t.

m

Il

Directory of Branches
BRANCH

ADDRESS

PHONE

NEW YORK (4)
2 Stono St.
.. BOwllng Green 9-3437
BOSTON (ro)
,330 Atlantic Avai.. Liberty 4057
.14 North (3ay St.
BALTIMORE (2)
...Calvert 4539
.6 North 6th St
...Lombard 7651
PHILADELPHIA
25 Commercial PI
...Norfolk 4-1083
NORFOLK
...Canal 3336
T
NEW ORLEANS (16) . ,321 Chartres St
,218 East Bay St..........Savannah 3-I72S
SAVANNAH
TAMPA*****.**....... .423 East Piatt St
.. Tampa MM-1323
.55 So. Conception St... ...Dial 2-1392
MOBILE
,45
Ponce
de
Leon
PUERTO RICO
...Puerto de Tlerra
GALVESTON
.219 20th Street
...Galveston 2-8043
.2021 S. Federal Highway.... Ft. Lauderdale 1601
FT. LAUDERDALE
V
w
fw

PUBLICATION OFFICE;
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
New York City
BOwling Green 9-8344

li

267

NAM Will Sell "Free
Enterprise" To Suckers
Watch out, fellow-suckers, here they come! The boys
who gave us B. O., Pyorrhea and Athlete's Foot are on the
warpath again. What are the selling this time? F. E.,
'"^rfefids—^Free Enterprise.
The National Asisociation of Manufacturers has an­
nounced a gigantic, colossal ballyhoo campaign through
press, radio, church, movies, theaters, schools and factory
talks, to "sweep Free Enterprise into public favor."
Millions upon millions of dollars are to be spent to sell
F. E. as our "economic salvation," the only thing that can
'"restore prosperity to post-war America."
Who's going to put up all this dough for full-page ads,
i3ind for the fat salaries and fatter expense accounts of "pub­
lic relations" gents who ""will seek to enlist the personal in­
terest" of newspaper publishers and editors, radio commen­
tators, movie producers, writers and lecturers?
Fellow-suckers, we are. That's where we start to pay.
The more the big-business corporations spend for ""adver­
tising" and "public relations," the less they pay in taxes,
and the more the American people will have to pay.
The NAM has it all doped out in one of its recent Con­
vention announcements.
""Let us never forget," it says, ""that legislators too are
I «nortal beings affhcted with all the shortcomings of human
^nature."
I
And here we thought our Congressmen were super[ men, completely immune to the temptations of world
wealth and power offered by the NAM!
But no, the NAM believes that if it can put on a big
enough propaganda campaign it can make its "'economic
philosophy" so popular "that adherence to it will prove a
political advantage to the rnajoiity of Congressmen."
As for you and me, fellow-suckers, the NAM believes
welre even more of a pushover. "People in the mass," it
says, "tend to think in blurs. They "read while they run.'
They are moved primarily by simple, emotional ideas."
Which soimds a bit like a quote from "Mein Kampf"—but
let it pass.
So we simple, emotional folks, with our blurry think­
ing (the NAM never once is so crude as to use the word
"sucker") are to have F. E. shouted at us over the radio,
l . ^tuck before our eyes every time we look at a billboard or
'a newspapefj and so impressed on our weak minds at every

— Juslice (ILGWU)

turn, that we'll be crying for F. E. for breakfast, dinner
and supper and voting only for Congressmen who promise
us F. E. 24 hours a day.
We won't even ask what kind of merchandise the
NAM has packaged up for us un,der the label of "Free En­
terprise"—according to the NAM. "People in the mass," it
says, "are unconcerned about details."
But, at the risk of making liars of the NAM, let's try
to focus our blurred thinking on the big business program
behind the F. E. label.
You may have thought you were engaging in a little
free enterprise when you joined a union. But what's F. E.
for us is not F. E. for the NAM. It bitterly opposed the
Wagner Act, for instance, as governmental interference
with Free Enterprise.
The NAM definitely does not like high taxes on high
incomes and high profits. They interfere with Free Enter­
prise. But who's going to pay for the relief of profiteers
from such taxes? Fellow-suckers, that's where we come in
again. Big business has no objection to a sales tax, for in­
stance.
Social security and other social legislation leaves the
NAM cold, as do public works to provide employment.
They're a tax on Free Enterprise, encourage "bureaucracy"
and interfere with an employer's freedom to say to a work­
er: "Take a job on my terms or go starve."
As for labor unions, a recent full-page ad of the Mc­
Graw-Hill Co., describing what big business means by Free
Enterprise, lets the cat out of the bag.
What's the big menace to Free Enterprise these days,
according to this ad? It's not Hitler. It's not the business
monopolies and cartels that are throttling small business op­
portunity and competition.
No, it's "the growing monopoly in labor which is
threatening to make the free enterprise system unwork­
able," the ad says. And it slambangs away at the "buccan­
eering spirit" of labor, the danger of granting it "unlimited
monopoly privilege" and the "excercise of arbitrary power
by labor."
In a word, under the slogan of Free Enterprise, big
business is planning its biggest publicity and political cam­
paign for 1944, to get a Congress that will legislate against
labor, undermine New Deal social legislation, and generally
place wealth and privilege in the saddle to ride rough-shod
over the interests of ""people in the mass."
•—Union News Service

-i

JOSE ESENDOLO
Carpenter, was hurl on board
the SS Dorothy of the A. H. Bull
Steamship Line and taken off the
ship in Trinidad on April 161h,
1943. Any member of the crew
knowing anything about this in­
cident please get in touch with
his wife—^Mrs. Jose Esendolo, 14
Montgomery Street, Savannah,
Georgia.
• • •
MICHAEL TISO
(MICHAEL GISON); Gei in
touch with your mother. It is
important.
*
*
*
WILLIAM FOLEY
Get in t^ch with your mother,
Mrs. W. Foley, 1555 Constance
Street, New Orleans, La.
e » »
JAMES A. SWEENEY
Please contact your wife, Vir­
ginia at 2375 Ivanhoe Street, Den­ --v.ver, Colorado.
J

Honor Roll
SS Collin Kelly
SS Wm. Johnston
Frank Voight
J. Popos
SS Flomar
J. Bloodworlh
M. Polise
M. Wiser
D. Golden
V. McKnight
W. Greer
A. E. Gordon
L. C. Hussey
K. Morgan
W. P. Adlam
Bud Hay

$20.00
10.80
10410
10410
6.00
8.00
6.00
6.00
6.00
64)0
54)0
44)0
2.00
2.00
2.00
,24)0

TOTAL

$105.00

I

�-

f'l-: •

Friday, February 4, 1944

THE

,We Lose First Round
In Bro. McCune Case

\

{Continiied from "Page 1)
brass hats could "extend their juri s d 1c t i o ri and intimidatidn to
practically every defense worker
in the country, since they are all
engaged in making or transport­
ing supplies for the army. Thus
the unions would be at the mercy
of the capricious and labor-hat­
ing brass hats and there would
«o doubt be a regular epidemic
of court martials aimed at mili­
tant union men.
The SIU maintains that if McGune is guilty of any violation of
articles he should be hailed be­
fore the regular Coast Guard
hearing panels which are set up

for that purpose. The SIU feels
that this move by the Army is so
fraught witn danger for the "eri^
tire labor movement, that the
case must be fought right
through to the highest court in
the land. And this we shall do.
In the meantime. Brother Mc­
Cune is being court martialed in
Camp Patrick Henry, There is
nothing we can do to prevent
this. But if we win the case in
the courts, any sentence given
him by the brass hats will be set
aside, and a precident will have
been set which will protect union
seamen from this sort of perse­
cution in the future.

.-r^rv-'-tP^nSi^Trai

SEAFARERS

LOG

fR€POT?T orv
^^ASHirvoTorv.
MARITIME
WAR EMERGENCY BOARD
I have been notified by the
Board that a meeting of the Ad­
visory Committee will be held on
February 16, 1944, The letter fol­
lows:
"To all members of the
Advisory Committee:
"The Maritime War Emergency
Board has scheduled a meeting
of the Advisory Committee on
February 16, 1944, at 4:00 P,M. in
the Commerce Building, Wash-

MWEB Would Cut Our Wages
{Continued from Page 1)
squeezed to the lowest possible
level.
Well, the SIU isn't going to
J
take it laying down. Brothers
Hawk and Dushane are going to
be on hand for this little cut­
throat session on February 16,
and will let the swivil chair ar­
tists know our position in no un­
certain terms. In the meantmie
the membership up and down the
coast is mobilizing a letter and
telegram campaign, designed to
let the Board (and Congress)
know just what they think of this
proposed blood-letting.
The following resolution was
passed by the New York branch
at last Monday's meeting:

.
I' ^^

I

A

RESOLUTION
Jan, 31, 1944
WHEREAS, the Maritime War
Emergency Board has called a
meeting of the Advisory Board to
discuss the cutting of war risk
compensation now being paid the
seamen, and
WHEREAS, the MWEB has in­
dicted that it considers the pres­
ent bonus being paid the seamen
as being "out of line with the ac­
tual war risk to which the sea­
men are subjected," which means
that even before the scheduled
meeting convenes the Board is
committed to the slashing of the
seamen's wages, and
WHEREAS, all other sections
of labor, steel, aircraft and rail­
road workers are fighting for and
winning increased wages to meet

Page Three

the sky-rocketing cost of living,
therefore
BE IT RESOL"VED, the officials
of the Atlantic &amp; Gulf District of
the Seafarers International Union
be instructed to conduct the most
uncompromising fight against this
threatened blow of our living
standards, and that organized la­
bor generally be informed of this
threat and be recruited to aid in
our fight for an American living
wage, and
BE IT FINALLY RESOLVED
that all ships crews immediately
wire protests to each member of
the Maritime War Emergency
Board on this attempt to reduce
the present war bonus.

Keep In Touch With
Your Draft Board

jAFL Council Condemns Lsibor
raft. Asks Ballot For Army

ington, D, C,
"The agenda will consist of one
item: War Risk Compensation
(War Bonuses),
"The Board has been advised
the dangers of the war on the
high seas has changed within the
past ten months. Sources of au­
thentic information within the
government have indicated the
war hazards at sea with regard
to merchant seamen have de­
creased; the Secretary of the
Navy has issued statements from
time to time which reveal that
submarine attacks on merchant
vessels have declined steadily;
cargo insiuance rates have been
reduced numerious times.
"As a consequence, the Board
has concluded that the war risk
compensation (War Bonuses)
specified in the decisions is out of
line with actual war risk to which
seamen are subjected,
"The Board considers it desir­
able and necessary to convene
with the advisory committee and
discuss the bonuses in the light
of developments.
"In this connection, the Board
welcomes any suggestions which
the parties signatory may care to
make on the subject of war risk
compensation as it relates to the
present status of the war at sea.
(Signed) ERICH NIELSEN,
Secretary"

this matter and this is to advise
the members that are ashore, and
on board vessels that are and
will be in port before this matter
comes up for a hearing, that
sending letters or telegrams of
protest to me will not help out
at aU, The people who must be
reached on this matter are the
three members of the Board who
have the sole power to make any
changes, if they are going to be
made. So I'll attach herewith
their names so that you will
know what to do on this matter.
Edward Macauley, Chairman
Maritime War Emergency
Board
Commerce Building
•
Washington, D. C,
?
Dr. Frank Graham
National War Labor Board
Department of Labor Bldg,
Washington, D, C,
Dr. John Steelman
Director of The Concilation
Service
Department of Labor Bldg,
Washington, D. C,

Send all protests to the above
members of the MWEB. I would
appreciate copies. Ships crews
should all send in their protests,
the more the merrier,
D, Butts, Ag't, San Juan—Con­
gratulations to you, your bt.vi.?r ,
Well, boys you all know what half, and Jr. Send your request
the above means, your bonuses for the brother's discharge from
are now about to be chopped to the Army to Mr. OrviUe Olsen,
pieces, which means that your in­ War S h i p p i ng Administration,
come will be reduced.
Commerce Bldg., Washington,
I know the position that will D. C. Send all data on his sea
be taken by the membership on| experience, etc.

Labor Urges Regulation
Of War Prisoners Jobs

Miami, Fla, — Hitting hard on two major domestic Council said.
Almost a full day's session was
issues, the AFL Executive Council rejected proposals for a
devoted
to the re-consideration of
nation-wide labor draft and called upon Congress to make
the application of the United
it possible for every member of the armed forces serving
Mine Workers Union for re-affili­
overseas to vote in the coming national elections.
ation. The Council first consider­
Other outstanding actions by*
ed a report from its committee MIAMI, Fla.—Warning against ment of prisoners of war on use­
the Council as its mid-winter ses- Still to be considered by the which had met a month ago in the employment of prisoners of ful projects where there could be
sion moved into the second week Council was the invitation from Washington with a UMW com­ war in competition with free Am­ no threat of sabotage and no con­
the British Trades Union Con­
included:
gress to attend a so-called world mittee and also considered a let­ erican workers on jobs where flict with free American workers.
1—It proposed that the United labor congress in London next ter received from John L, Lewis, they might be able to sabotage "The way we deal with prison­
Mine Workers Union would re­ June as well as a series of pre­ UMW president.
the war effort, the AFL Execu­ ers of war may affect the treat­
turn to the Federation with the liminary reports from the post­
tive Council called upon the Gov­ ment of our own boys who are
same jurisdiction it enjoyed be­ war committee, headed by Vice After considerable discussion, ernment to deal with this probthe following decision was an­
captured by the enemy. It is
fore it left and authorized a com­ President Matthew Woll.
em proniptly.
nounced:
mittee to take up with the union
AFL President William Green therefore essential that our poli­
the settlement of jurisdictional In its statement on the propos­ "The Council proposes that the told a press conference that many cies be humane as well as prac­
conflicts precedent to re-affilia- al for a National Service Act, the United Mine Workers return with complaints have been received tical. The Geneva Convention
Executive Council left no room the jurisdiction they had when
tion,
for
doubt as to its unanimous they left the American Federa­ from unions against the "indis­ prohibits the employment of
; 2 —After receiving a report
criminate employment" of such
from Joseph A, Padway, counsel opinion. It denounced such leg­ tion of Labor, The Council in- prisoners. He gave as specific ex­ prisoners of war for production
for the AFL, on the status of anti- islation as unwise, and unneces­ structs its committee to meet amples the assignment of prison­ or transportation of arms or
labor state legislation, the Coun­ sary and stated flatly that such a again with a committee repre­ ers to jobs on railroads and to munitions of any kind or for
cil directed him to continue the law would not prevent strikes. senting the United Mine Workers logging in the Wisconsin forests. transporting material intended
successful fight to challenge the The only way to prevent strikes, of America for the purpose of The text of the council statement for combat units. Their employ­
validity of these measures in the the Council declared, is to re­ clarifying all questions that have follows:
ment in degrading, unhealthful,
move the unjust conditions which not been settled."
courts,
"The
Executive
Council
is
provoke
workers
to
strike
despite
or hazardous work is also forbid­
Among these questions are the
3—^The Council received with
deeply concerned over the almost
interest and approbation a rec­ their patriotism and their desire jurisdictional conflicts existing
den. It is therefore incumbent
between District 50 of the UMW indiscriminate employment of upon the Government to evolve
ommendation by President John to help win the war.
prisoners of war in competition
P, Frey of the Metal Trades De­ Taking up the soldier vote and a large number of AFL af­
and foUow a definite program
with
free American workers.
partment that all federal agen­ question, the Council made it filiates and the broad jurisdic­
which
will not evoke retaliation
cies dealing with labor be cen­ plain that a clear and simple fed­ tional clash between the UMW as "This practice is dangerous and
tralized in the Labor Department eral statute is needed to permit a whole and the Progressive Mine is calculated to arouse deep re­ by the enemy—nor arouse fric­
sentment among American work­ tion with free American work­
to the end that clear-cut and con­ members of the armed forces Workers Union of America,
ers.
It cannot be justified on the ers."
In response to questions at a
sistent labor policies be formul­ serving overseas to exercise their
grounds
of manpower shortages
ated and followed, Frey charged right to vote in the 1944 national press conference, AFL President
or
for
any
other reason.
that at present labor unions are elections. State laws which hin­ William Green said that, in his
required to deal with twenty-five der the voting privileges of sol­ opinion, "progress" had been "The Executive Council feels
Keep In Touch With
separate agencies whose policies diers and sailors overseas should made in the protracted negotia­ that a clear-cut program should
be worked out for the employ­
be superseded, the Executive tions with the UMW.
are frequently contradictory.
Your Draft Board

�•\..J' y--

Page Fotir

THE

Hawk Protests Coast Guard
Move To Include Overtime
In Forfeiture Proceeding
{Continued from Page 1)
their morale—a blow which a
grateful nation has no intention
of aiming.

bifter poun&lt;i of fiesi&gt;*'!R)irr''^^Ien
who have every right to expect
gratitude for service rendered
their country.

Overtime work is rendered by
tibe seamen as extra efforirof«en
tthder conditions that may mean
severe physical hardship. Over­
time is real "blood money," and
should not be subject to confisca­
tion when the seamen are found
guilty of some technical viola­
tion or articles. Should this be
done, it would appear that the
government is demanding a last

This Union appeals to you to
hold in abeyance anj' change in
existing' forfeiture procedure.
Don't let the seamen think for
one minute that the sacrifices
they are making for their nation
are unappreciated and in vain.
Very truly yours,
JOHN HAWK,
Secretary-Treasurer

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, February 4, 1944

1

French Seamen Win
Improved Conditions
Identification
Fishermen

(ITF) The tripartite Advisory and Technical Q&gt;m
mittee for the Mercantile Marine, recently instituted hy^
the French Committee of National Liberation, met for the
first time in Algiers from 13th to 24th September, and it9
recommendations for unification of wages and working

"A port order issued by Rear
Admiral Stanley V. Parker, U. S.
C. G., has informed all crew
members of commercial fishing
vessels that they must possess
Captain of the Port identification
cards reciting their occupation as
"commercial fishing approved" on
or after February 1, 1944.

.conditions have inspired the Committee of National Liberation
issue two orders, one relating to the organization of work on board:
and the other to wages, which came into force on 1st December and
1st November, 1943 respectively. The new conditions apply front
/these dates on all vessels directly controlled by the Mercantile Mar-,
ine Board. On vessels sailing from British ports, and those on whicll
British conditions have hitherto been in force, they will apply as
soon as agreements .to that effect have been come to between the
French and British authorities.

&lt;•-

-»

The new unified regime, a long-standing claim of the seamen,
will put an end to many difficulties with which the seamen's organi­
zation has hitherto been up against. It will considerably shorten
working hours,' providing for a normal 8 hours a day and 48 a week
at sea as well as in port, and fix wages at about the rates current in!
the Allied merchant navie.s, which are considerably higher than
Washington, Jan. 22—Some startling figures on war casualties were issued this those hitherto paid in North Africa.

LABOR CASUALTIES ON HOME FRONT
GREATER THAN IN ARMED FORCES

week by the OWI and next to nothing was said about them by the daily press and radio.
The following are some of the details. As already said, the 48
These figures showed:
hour week will apply, but to meet wartime requirements an extra
1. That 37,600 persons were killed in industry—from Pearl Harbor to Jan. 1, 1944 three hours unpaid work can be called for weekly, for requirements
when entering and leaving port. Apart from this all time in excess
-—^7,300 more than the military fatalities.

• 2. That 210,000 were perman
enlly disabled — 60 times more
than the military wounded and
missing.
3. That injuries account for
four times as many lost manhours as strikes and that 50,000
workers in manufacturing are ab­
sent every day because of acci­
dents.
4. That deaths and injuries on
the job are occurring now at the
tsate of 270,000,000 lost man-days
_ «' y e a r, the equivalent of the
Withdrawal of 900,000 workers
for a full year from the produc­
tion lines.
Sources consulted, the OWI said,
included the Department of La­
bor, Nat'l Committee for the Con­

of 48 hours a week will be paid for at overtime rates. When the
servation of Manpower in War
weekly day of rest cannot be given at the time fixed, compensation,
Industries, Nat'l Safety Council,
either in money or time off, will be given. Holidays will be two days
War and Navy Depts., Maritime
per month of service with wages and cost of living bonus, plus 50
Commission, War Production Following crew members of the francs a day food allowance if not fed on board.
Board, CIO, AFL and the man­ SS Firmore have overtime com­
The following are some of the new wage rates:
agements of individual war pro­ ing from the Calmar Line: Albert
duction plants.
Tanner, James Brown, John E.
Monthly wage Cost of living bonus
In reckoning the cost of these Campbell, E. Dabose, Frank Ran­ DECK:
Francs
Francs
production line casualties to the kin.
Boatswain
;
2,580
700
War Effort, the OWI report de»
»
*
Carpenter
2,580
700
clai-ed that "the death or disabil­ Crew of SS John Stevens which Boatswain's mate
2,400
700
ity of a skilled war worker here paid off in April 1943, have $125 Able seaman
2,070
650
can mean the death of several attack bonus coming. Collect Ordinary seamen
1,800
500
fighting men overseas. Men close from Waterman Line.
Young seamen
1,350
500
to the picture of tight delivery
• » »
Boy
,
1,020
500
schedules and of assembly-line Following crew members of SS
coordination say this statement Grace Abbott have overtime com­ ENGINE ROOM
can be accepted in its most literal ing from the Calmar Line: J. Leading fireman
2,580
700
Greaser
,
2,580
700
sense."
Stewart, Roy Theiss, E. Ramerez,
Fireman
2,190
650
good quality, a heavy woolen J. Berkenkemper, F. Tangeland, Trimmer and cleaner
2,070
650
C.
Reynolds,
N.
Fraser,
W.
Broil,
scarf and other items that were
CATERING, CARGO VESSELS:
P.
Rooney,
H.
Stone,
J.
Gillen,
P.
practical and useful to seamen.
,
2,580
700
Lattick, W. Russel, J. Davis and Chief cook
Cook
2,290
650
• Several members came in the • It seems that these men went H. Collier.
Pantryman
2,190
650
other day and each had a bundle to the Christian Science reading
»
• •
'under his arm. They unwrapped room to get some reading matter Deck and Engine Departments Steward
1,800
500
v
the bundles and began sorting to take aboard ship and the per­ of SS Chas. Henderson which
'different articles of wearing ap­ son in charge gave each man a paid off in January 1944, have CATERING. PASSENGER AND MIXED VESSELS:
2,580
700
parel preparatory to stowing bundle of clothing enumerated overtime coming from the Miss­ Chief steward and cook
Second
and
third
stewards
2,400
700
them in their sea-bags.
above, then told them it was not issippi Steamship Company.
Saloon
steward
2,070
650
• • «
given as charity but as a gift
" "What do you think of this
1,800
500
from the Christian Science The following crew members Steward or stewardess
(gift?" one of the men asked. I
Boy
(16
to
18
years)
1,350
500
Church. Needless to say the gifts of SS J. Henderson have over­
looked their gifts over and here
time coming: Ed. Hopke, L. RovIn addition to these wages a monthly war risk bonus of 2,000
is what each man had: Two pair were greatly appreciated.
ery,
L.
L.
Eckman,
D.
S.
Beachfrancs
is payable to both officers and men. Overtime rates run from
of long heavy woolen stockings, With hundreds of millions of
ley,
J.
Martinez.
The
entire
crew
12
to
17
francs an hour for full ratings, and are 9 francs for young
a woolen helmet that covered the dollars at their disposal, one
has
$10
linen
money
coming.
seamen
and
8 francs for boys. There are also certain occupational
ears, nose, head, chin and neck, would think that the War Ship­
allowances
for
some ratings.
two pair of heavy woolen mit­ ping Administration would at
tens, two heavy woolen knitted least see to it that the merchant THOMAS O'BRIEN &amp; JACK
Another important decision is the ending of certain excessive
sweaters, a woolen knitted watch seamen were properly clad, es­ LITTLE: You are to divide the disciplinary powers with which the Vichy Government had invested
' hat, a seaman's knife of very pecially when their vessels are wages of the utility man missing matters allowing them even to sentence seamen to terms of im­
on northern runs with the tem­ from July 17 to December 30, prisonment. Seamen are also now entitled to demand their dis­
Bull Line.
perature hovering near the zero 1943. Collect
charge at the end of a voyage after six months on board, a right
»
*
mark. After all, they are squan­
formerly denied them under a Decree of September,-1939.
dering the taxpayers' money and HARRY WOJTOWITZ &amp; DON­
The following crew members
giving the taxpayers very little ALD NOREN: Difference of
The following Stewcirds De­
in. return. Quite a few trainees wages for 2nd Cook and Baker partment men have overtime of the SS Grace Abbott have
j t h a t the Maritime Commission will be divided between you. Col­ coming from the Waterman Line: overtime coming from the Cal­
New York City. J. P. Allen. V/illiam Mathews.- P. mar Line: H .Russel. H. Corson.
turn out are kept on the beach lect at Bull Line,
» * »
H. Collier. J. Stewart. J. Stryaland herded in dormatories for
King.
J.
H.
KOPPERSMITH
8E
RU­
»
»
•
ha. C. Ramerez. C. M. Reynolds,
periods of three and four months
before they are shipped out as BEN JOHNSON: You are to di­ The following crew members Rog Theiss. Walter Broil. P.
messmen and wipers. Instead of vide the wages of the 2nd But­ of the SS Ben Williams have Rooney and J. Gillen.
• • •
giving these kids an opportunity cher, missing from December 5 overtime coming from the Cal­
to
December
16,
1943.
to do something useful they are
mar Linq: C. Cresta, G. J. Kam- The following crew members
• * *
kept in the status of bums, housed
inskas. J. Harrison. H. R. Ja^ck- of the SS Jocelyn have overtime
in ill-smelling dormatories, de­ S. T. McGEE: Has 6 days pay son. S. D. Norris. J. Girlando. H. coming from the Calmar Line:
M. Robb. A. G. Towell, L. M.
pendent on missions for their coming from the Bull Line.
Renter and E. Stinehelfer.
» » •
» » *
Ruggiero and D. Pierce.
keep. I believe Senator Truman
could get something useful here. MELVILLE: As pantryman you Crew of Luclas B. LaMar has
Keep In Touch With
have extra meal money coming Explosive Bonus coming. Collect
JOHN MOGAN. Agent from the Bull Line.
from Waterman Line.
Your Draft Board

i

MONEY DUE

BOSTON

j;.

i.

»

h

s:-

!

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MWEB WOULD CUT OUR WAGES &#13;
WE LOSE FIRST ROUND IN BRO. MCCUNE CASE&#13;
HAWK PROTESTS COAST GUARD MOVE TO INCLUDE OVERTIME IN FORFEITURE PROCEEDING&#13;
"MUSTERING OUT" PAY FOR SEAMEN IS PROPOSED&#13;
SUP REPORT REVEALS GROWTH OF FURUSETH SCHOOL OF SEAMANSHIP&#13;
"MUSTERING OUT" PAY FOR SEAMEN IS PROPOSED&#13;
NAM WILL SELL "FREE ENTERPRISE" TO SUCKERS&#13;
AFL COUNCIL CONDEMNS LABOR DRAFT, ASKS BALLOT FOR ARMY&#13;
LABOR URGES REGULATION OF WAR PRISONERS JOBS&#13;
FRENCH SEAMEN WIN IMPROVED CONDITIONS&#13;
IDENTIFICATION FISHERMEN&#13;
LABOR CASUALTIES ON HOME FRONT GREATER THAN IN ARMED FORCES</text>
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m

^j^^RERS JOQ
^
y-o I' Vol. VI.

OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ATLANTIC AND GULF DISTRICT,
SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION OF NORTH AMERICA

No. 4

NEW YORK, N.Y. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 18. 1944

New SIU Officials Elected
1944 Officers Installed By Tally
Of Vote; Members Gains Protected

NOTICE!
The New York office of Ihe
Atlantic and Gulf District of
the SIU has been notified that
all seamen's papers that are
lost must be turned over to the
U. S. Shipping Commissioner's
office according to Govern­
ment regulations.

Tabulations of votes cast in the annual elections of officers for the Atlantic and
Gulf District of the Seafarers International Union have been completed. The results
were submitted by the Tally Committee in a report to the membership meetings on a
coastwise basis. The membership concurred in the report installing those elected in
office. Although many of those renamed to office are incumbent officials some changes
In order to avoid trouble
were made.
for
the Union all members
In re-electing Brother John
Hawk as Sec'y-Treasurer of the
District and returning many of
the Port Agents and Patrolmen
to office the membership assured
the Union of capable and experi­
enced leadership for the difficult
year that lies ahead.
Gains Stressed
Stressing many of the gains
that the Union has made during
the past year and warning the
membership and all officers to be
constantly alert to the maneuv­
ers of anti-Union elements the
Union's leadership pointed to the
record of the organization for de­
livering the goods to the men on
the fighting fronts.
Also on the general ballot were
amendments to the Union's con­
stitution and a resolution altering
the shipping rules to conform
with the present war-time con­
dition. The resolution calls upon
all members to sail when they

Coastwise concurrence with a resolution instructing
Sec'y-Treasurer John Hawk to invest a portion of the SIU
Atlantic and Gulf District's funds in War Bonds has been
tabulated with a practically unanimous membership in
favor of putting the Union's idle money to work in the
war effort.
of the Pacific. Brother Dwyer
The resolution directed that
$45,000 from the General Fund
and $10,352 from the Hospital
and Burial Fund be ear-marked
to complete the transaction. These
bonds will have a matured value
of $75,000 and are in addition to
the present total of $102,000
(matured value) now held in the
safety vaults by the Union's
membership.
The decision to purchase the
bonds came when the Union was
solicited to buy bonds in the
Fourth War Loan Drive by Mrs.
William J. Dwyer, widow of a
late member of the Sailors' Union

was lost on a ship without trace
during the war, as were all hands
aboard the same vessel. Mrs.
Dwyer worked in connection with
the State AFL Committee on the
Fourth War Bond Drive in ar­
ranging the purchase.
The bonds have already been
paid for and upon receipt of
same they will be deposited in
the Union's safety deposit and
make a grand total of $177,000
worth of War Bonds at matured
value being held in trust for the
membership.
The resolution ordering the
(Continued on Page 2)

finding lost seamen's papers
are asked to comply. Those
seeking their papers can re­
cover them at the respective
Commissioner's office.

BALTIMORE, Md. — High
praise was bestowed on the war
record of members of the Ameri­
can Federation of Labor by Gov­
ernor Herbert O'Conor of Mary­
land at ceremonies here attend­
ing the launching of the Morris
Sigman, a new Liberty ship, nam­
ed after the late President of the
International Ladies Garment
Workers Union.
The Morris Sigman is the fourth
Liberty ship in the past few
weeks to be sent down the ways
bearing the names of past
I.L.G.W.U. leaders. The others
were the Morris Hillquit, the Ben­
jamin Schlesinger and the Meyer
London. The ships were financed
{Continued on Page 3)

RMO Anti-Union
Drive Fostered
In Lakes Area
Striving to perpetuate the RMO of the War Shipping
Administration as a permanent organization in the post^
war period certain officials of that Government group are
planning to set-up an economic stranglehold on all seamen!
manning every type of vessel in the American Merchant

Marine, or connected with it in a#subsidiary capacity: Tugs, barges method to provide an outlet to
employ the thousands of trainees
and flat scows not excepted.
they have crowded the industry
The purpose of the RMO's drive with who are currently on the
for control is discerned as a RMO payrolls at some $6.50 per
day and to justify the RMO's
wastage of the taxpayers' money
before the Appropriations Com­
mittee in Washington.
This is seen in the controversy
recently indulged in concerning'
MONTGOMERY, Ala. — A
the recruitment and maiming of
panel of three Federal judges
ships plying the Lakes area and
Thursday of last week denied an
the RMO's being granted control
injunction sought by Alabama
The membership of the Atlantic and Gulf District of the Seafarers International over the area under a new "plan."
labor leaders of the AFL to block
enforcement of the reactionary Union are driving to protect their current scales of war bonuses from further attempts This was worked out following
Bradford Act which is designed to cut them by the War Shipping Administration through the Maritime War Emerbetween the
to hamper Trade Unions in this gency Board. Wires and letters are being sent by individuals and groups of members the War ML^poLr'^c'oSSS
State.
from all ports and branches protesting the attempts to cut the present scales. All com- the RMO and the Lake Carriers'
The law passed by the
evidence of the Union's Marine after Pearl Harbor.
effect, it is said, that
1943 State Legislature provides to members of the Maritime War
...
the new set-up aids the RMO
position and for when the mat­ The War Shipping Administra­
that all union activities be regu­ Emergency Board, as follows:
lated under a State Labor Dept. Dr. Frank P. Graham, National ter must come up for an advisory tion's Recruitment and Manning which has been blocked in some
respects by both the Lake Car­
created for the purpose by the War Labor Board Dept. of La­ committee meeting soon.
Organization has kept up a con­
riers' Ass'n and the Office of De­
same Act.
bor Building; Edward Macauley, Officers of the Union in com­ stant barrage of propaganda over fense Transportation—and it will
Section 7 of this law requues Chairman of the Maritime War menting upon the proposed re­ the radio and through the press further strengthen the anti-Union
that unions must file their con­ Emergency Board, Commerce ductions point out that they are urging men to return to sea, and plans of the RMO, for they have
stitutions and by-laws, numbers Bldg., and Dr. John R. Steelman, not consistent with present day recruiting men for service with been given:
of members and salaries of of­ Director of the Conciliation Ser­ economic factors due to the bur­ the American Merchant Marine.
1. Control of the oecupationficers, dates of elections and lists vice, Dept. of Labor Bldg., Wash­ dens of additional taxation and In all these statements the RMO
clearly indicated the approxim­ tional deferments of men in se­
of all dues and assessments le­ ington, D.C. All are members of increased living costs.
vied, as well as lists of properties the MWEB in addition to the They cite the fact that count­ ate earnings and bonuses provid­ lected age groups and capacit­
owned by the unions.
less thousands of patriotic Am­ ed for under the war-time emer­ ies.
other posts they hold.
2. Complete control of re­
In addition to this the Brad­ Copies of such letters and tele­ erican seamen answered the pleas gency.
ford Act requires the unions to grams are being sent to the of their Country and left lucra­ This is the bargain that the cruitment and manning for the
lakes operators.
file complete financial statements Union's Washington Representa­ tive shore-side jobs to return to WSA now seeks to set aside even
sea
and
serve
in
the
Merchant
tive,
Matthew
Dushane
to
be
re­
{Cwitinued from Page 2)
{Contmiuf on Page 4)
' {Continued on Page 3)
{Contimied on "Page 2)

A labama Sta te
AFL Fights
Bradford Act

la'

SIU Purchases $75,000
War Bonds In DHve

ILGWU Bonds
Buy Fourth
Liberty Ship

UNION DRIVES TO PROTECT
BONUSES FROM MWEB CUT

�THE

Page Two

SEAFARERS LOG
Published by the

SEAFARERS' INTERNATIONAL UNION

OF NORTH AMERICA

Atlantic and Gulf District
Affillfted u-ith the American Federation of labor

HARRY LUNDEBERG

------ "President

110 Market Street, Saa Francisco, Calif.

JOHN HAWK

LOG

MATTHEW DtJSHANE - - - Washmgton Rep,
424 5tli Street, N. W., Washington, D. C
m
w.
m

Directory of Branches
PHONE

ADDRES3

NEW YORK (4)
2 Stone 5t
BOSTON (10)
330 Atlantic Ave
BALTIMORE (2)
14 North Cay St
PHILADELPHIA
J North 6th St
NORFOLK,
25 Commercial PI
NEW ORLEANS (16) ..324 Chartrea St
SAVANNAH
218 East Bay St
TAMPA
423 East Piatt St
MOBILE
7 St. Michael St
PUERTO RICO
45 Ponce de Leon
GALVESTON
219 20th Street

BOwIing Croea 9-.
Liberty 40J7
^Ivert 4539
^inU
Norfolk 4-1033
Canal 3336
.Savannah 3-1728
Dial 2-1392
Puerto de Tierra
CUIveaton 2-8043

Board has authorized payment of
a port attack bonus of $125.00 to
the crew members of the S.S.
James M. Gillis for ihe enemy
attack on the Port of Naples,
Italy. Payment o£ the above
eunount can be obtained by call­
ing at the office of Smith &amp; John­
son, 80 Broad Street, New York
City.
Stewards Depts. of the S.S.
Francis Marion and the S.S. C
Curtis of the Robin Line who
made the last voyages, of those
vessels, contact C. Martin, New
York Patrolman regarding divis­
ion of extra-meal money.

{Continued from Page 1)
though they guaranteed the same
in order to aid the HMO ,in re­
cruiting seamen.
In addition to that the WSA's
RMO has maneuvered to freeze
those who answered the call in­
to the industry as well as those
actively engaged as seafarers at
the war's outbreak.
Further, the RMO through its
recruitment programs has flood­
ed the industry to a dangerous
extent with some newcomers who
cannot be counted as competent
and whom are regarded as a
constant source of danger to
their- fellow seamen on the job.
Thousands of experienced sea­
men carry that new element on

SJU Offic^ Elected
By Membership Ballot

continual struggle for wages and
{Continued from Page 1)
conditions against the operators.
have joined a vessel and places
Opposition Cited
PUBLICATION OFFICE:
a penalty on performers.
All
officers
look forward to a
ROOM 213, 2 STONE STREET
Tally Committee's Report
greater
SIU
and
point to the con­
New Y'ork City (4)
BOwling Green 9-8346
Tho.'sc elected to office, accord­ tinual opposition that the SIU
»267
ing to the Tally Committee's re­ has received from countless ele­
port, were:
ments in Washington who would
^Brother John Hawk, No. 2212, deprive the seamen of their hardre-elected as Sec'y-Treasurer for won gains.
the District.
In reviewing the past year,
John Mogan, No. 216, Boston Brother Hawk, re-elected as
Sec'y-Treasurer for the Atlantic
Agent.
and Gulf District, pointed out the
Joseph Lapham, No. 247, Bos­ many attacks that have been made
ton Joint-Patrolman.
on the Union by the bureaucrats
Paul Hall, No. G 190, New York seeking to perpetuate themselves
Agent.
in office in Washington.
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Lack of vitally necessary that it should
Joe Volpian, No. G 56, New He pointed but that the or­
a clear and consistent Govern­ be restored. Abuse or arbitrary York Engine Patrolman.
ganization and the membership
ment labor policy is largely re­ directives will not do it. Attempt­
must
be constantly alert and on
sponsible for wartime strikes, ed punishment through legisla­ Louis Goffin, No. 4526 and their toes to preserve the gains
John P. Frey, president of the tion will not do it. Efforts to turn James Sheehan, No. G 306, both the Union has made.
AFL Metal Trades Department the members of our armed forces New York Deck Patrolmen.
&lt;aiarged in a "Labor For Victory" against the munition workers will Claude Fisher, No. 362 and Serving as a Tally Committee
loroadcast over a nation-wide not do it.
Fred Hart, No. 488, both New were Brothers Arthur Thompson,
No. 2888; Joseph Timitho, No.
"The great majority of strikes York Stewards Patrolmen.
NBC hookup.
5202; Ralph Hayes, No. 348;
Instead of a national labor pol­ have resulted from an unneces­
icy, administered by one central sary irritation, an irritation which Harry J. Collins, No. 496, Phil­ Stanley Greenridge, No. 1863;
Ferdinand Nunziaute, No. 7055,
. authority, Frey said,, there have like a chafing harness has finally adelphia Agent.
and
John Marciano, No. 6282.
developed more than twenty-five created an open sore. Workmen %oe Flanagan, No. 542, Balti­
Federal agencies which issue reg­ who have given their solemn more Agent.
ulations, directives and decisions pledge not to strike during the &lt;^atthew Little, No. 2294, Bal­
Keep In Touch With
that are too often conflicting and duration of the war must be pro­ timore Patrolman-Dispatcher.
tected
from
anyone
in
private
confusing.
Your Draft Baardi
He also charged that because management or governmental po­ Rexford E. Dickey, No. 652 and
James
T.
McCaulley,
No.
1,
both
of the confusion and delays in de­ sition who would take advantage
cisions which sometimes drag on of that no-strike pledge to see as, Baltimore Joint Patrolmen.
for a year or more workers be­ how far they can go in imposing Charles C. Martin, No. 1856,
Norfolk Agent.
come irritated and break their uDon them."
Paul Ambrose, No. 4713, Nor­
«30-strike pledge.
folk Joint-Patrolman.
To remedy the situation, Frey
called for the centralization of all
;Charles Waid, No. G54, SavahGovernment bureaus and boards
nah Agent.
dealing with labor in the Deparl.^p. L. Parker, No. G 16Q, Tampa
$20.00 Agent.
{Continued from Page I)
k^ment of Labor, which was orig­ FRANK MUHHY
16..00
in-' inally set up for that purpose. In S.S. J. BALDWIN
purchase also provides that the
10.00 foi^en Banks, No. G1, Mobile bonds shall be examined by each
oo other way can a definite na­ J. T. EDWARDS
7.00 Agent.
tional labor policy be established, S.S. WM. S. BEANEH
Quarterly Finance Committee.
ARTHUR E. CORD
7.00 C. J. Stephens, No. G 76, New The measure follows in full:
iYey declared. He added;
7.00 Orleans Agent.
"Strikes and threats of strikes JENS JENSEN
RESOLUTION
6.00 James DeVito, No. G185 and
during wartime are indefensible. S.S. CLARK MILLS
Ted
R.
Terrington,
No.
G
68,
both
S.S.
WARD
HUNT
6.00
They aie Inloleiable. And the
WHEREAS: The Atlantic &amp;
6.00 as New Orleans Joint-Patrolmen. Gulf District of the Seafarers In­
4kfh3erican people have a right to S.S. VIRGINIA DARE
5.00 Ray W. Sweeney, No. G 20, ternational Union of North Am­
demand that they shall not occur. BERT SONDERICKER
3.00 Galveston Agent.
*'But there are also other condi­ J. MALFARA
erica has in the Hospital, BuriJil
2.50 j/Daniel Butts, No. 190, San Juan and General Funds more than
tions during wartime equally in­ F. SULLIVAN
2.00 Agent.
defensible. One of these is profit­ CARL PAETZEL
sufficient cash to meet the otdi-.
2.00
nary disbursements required of
eering; and another, equally in­ H. CHILDS
Those elected to office by the
defensible and intolerable, is mis- FEILDING W. WARREN .... 2.00 membership pledged themselves these funds, and
2.00
Cianagement of the labor situa­ A. FAUST
WHEREAS: This cash is lying
2.00 to continued development of the idle in the bank, and
tion by employers and represen- C. J. EBEHHART
M. LONGFELLOW
1.0ft Union organizationally, and rep­ WHEREAS: United States De­
y ^tives of Federal agencies.
1.00 resent the membership in their fense Bonds constitute the safest
"I would fail in my responsib- ALBERT GRUBER
1.Q0
ility if I did not frankly tell you CHARLES DOWLING
investiment in the world, the en­
t, that the morale of our industrial A. SCHALNAN GRUNAH .. 1.00
Keep In Touch With tire integrity of the government
workers has been injured—seri­
being their guarantee, and
ously injured—and that it is now
TOTAL
$111.50
WHEREAS: The government
Your Draft Board

Frey Blames 25 Federal
Agencies For Mixups
That Provide Strikes

Honor Roll

Friday, February 18, 1944

MONEY DUE Union Drives To Protect
The Maritime War Emergency Bonuses From MWEB Cut

------- Secy-Treas,

P. O. Bos 25, Station P., New York City

Bi^ANCH

SEAFARERS

their backs when it comes to ac­
tually sailing the ships.
The old-timers who disregard­
ed ofA-is of safe shipyard work
at high wages—as well as other
shore-side jobs—remained in the
industry sailing hazardous ships
without guns and without de­
fense of any extent against the
vicious torpedoes of enemy sub­
marines.
And in this they are compar­
able to "clay pigeons" for they
are under the continual hazard
of not only submarine attack but
surface vessel as well as aerial
attacks and bombings.
In ~ determining the basis for
attempted cuts, the Union's of­
ficers point out that the govern­
ment officials utilize figures from
the Navy stating that the sub­
marine menace has lessened be­
cause sinkings have decreased, as
well as reductions in cargo in­
surance rates.
The obvious fallacy of using
such figures is apparent, officials
declai-e, for the lessening of sink­
ings cannot be construed as to
mean the absence of hazard of
submarine sinkings, as well asdangers from surface attacks and
aerial attacks and bombings.
Such are always present in the
war zones and should be the ba­
sis for increasing the bonuses, it
is said.
Further, it is declared that the
comparison of crew members
with cargo insurance rates is in­
compatible with the fact. Cargo,
it is argued, is a cold, inanimate
property and is not subject to
nerve hazards and is insured on
the probability of loss rather than
against damage.. Where damagable cargo such as perishables
are concerned insurance rates re­
main at their former percentages.
And seamen are highly perishable
since they are animate beings
and subject to the human equa­
tion.
The proportion of seamen cas­
ualties from the war attest the
hazards and proclaim the neces­
sity of the continuation of exten­
sion of the war bonuses. All mem­
bers are urged by the officials to
continue in their fight against the.
proposed attempts to cut such.

/
^/

SIU Purchases $75,(MM)
War Bonds In Drive
has urgent need of this money to
finance a war in which our mem­
bers are front-line fighters, there­
fore be it
RESOLVED: That the Secre­
tary-Treasurer of the Atlantic
and Gulf District be instructed to
withdraw $45,000 from the Gen­
eral Fund and $10,352 from tjhe ;
Hospital and Burial Fund, and
with this money purchase war
bonds, and be it further
RESOLVED: That a banking
committee of 3 men be elected at
the New York Branch meeting to
go with the Secretary-Treasurer
to deposit these bonds in the safe
deposit box. These bonds shall
be examined by each Quarterly
Finance Committee.
Ralph H. Hayes. No. 348
Joseph Timothio. No. 5202
James Malfara, No. 7443

J

�Friday, February 18, 1944

ILGWU Bonds
Buy Fourth
Liberty Ship
{Continued from l?age I)
by the purchase of eight million
dollars worth of Wai' Bonds by
the Joint Dress Board of the
I;L,G,W.U, in the third War Loan
Drive.
"The success of our war effort
could not have been achieved ex­
cept for the services of the great
body of loyal American workers
who make up the American Fed­
eration of Labor," Gov. O'Conor
said at a luncheon preceding the
launching of the Morris Sigman.
"Offsetting the few instances of
derelictions by unions, there are
countless numbers of cases of
great sacrifice and devoted ser­
vice by workers and their organi­
zations.
. "It has never been necessary
for me in my official capacity to
condemn labor leaders. The rep­
resentatives of the AFL in Mary­
land have eooperated very closely
with me and are doing a fine job
for their country."
AFL President William Green
told the gathering that "labor
will make any sacrifice to win the
war." He called for strict adher­
ence to the no-strike pledge in
the months ahead.
The late Morris Sigman was
eulogized by David Dubinsky,
I.L.G.W.U. President, and by Ju­
lius Hochman, Vice President of
the Union. Dubinsky declared
that the ship bearing Sigman's
name may eventually be sunk,
but it will never falter in its duty
or compromise with the enemy.
Hochman stressed the fight made
by Sigman against Communist in­
filtration in the union and declar­
ed that due to his leadership the
Cvmmunists have no influence in
the organization today. He said
that immigrant workers learned
the meaning of Americanism
through the union which has ed­
ucated them in democracy.
The actual launching was per­
formed under the sponsorship of
Mrs. Morris Sigman. Although

THE

AlabamaState
AFL Fights
Bradford Act
{Continued from Pige 1)
with the State and would bar
strikes by terming them "outlaw."
Bentley G. Byrnes and George
L. Smart, both of New Orleans,
represented the labor groups,
while Atty.-Gen. Wm. N. Mc­
Queen appeared for the State.
The panel of judges was made
up of District Judges T. A. Murphree and Charles B. Kennamer
with Circuit Judge Samuel H.
Sibley.
The Federal Court action was
filed in the name of the Interna­
tional Brotherhood of Teamsters,
Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and
Helpers, AFL, Local 675 of Gads­
den, Alabama, together with
other labor organizations through­
out the State.
Indications are that the fight
will be carried to the highest
possible court.
In affirming the Act as enforcable the Court upheld the ap­
pointment of W. Emmett Brooks
as State Labor Director. Mr.
Brooks recently declared in an
administrative opinion that his
department will consider closed
shop agreements invalid "unless
some court of competent jurisdic­
tion shall declare otherwise."
This, the AFL Unions declared,
was an attempt to throw the en­
tire State over to an "open-shop"
policy and abrogate all existing
Union contracts.
Meanwhile, a petition for an
injunction asked by the Alabama
State Federation of Labor in the
Montgomery County Circuit
Court to stop the payment of sal­
aries by the State to the labor
director was denied by Judge
Walter B. Jones.
she is now an invalid, Mrs. Sig­
man broke the bottle of cham­
pagne over the knife-like prow
of the ship at the fii-st try and
sent it smartly and auspiciously
down the ways into Chesapeake
Bay.

MONEY DUE

,v

By reason of an enemy attack
on the port of Oran an attack
bwjus is payable to crew mem­
bers' of the S.S. Josiah Bartlett,
Voyage No. 2, who were attached
to that vessel as of that date.
Checks and vouchers are being
held at the New York office of
Eastern Steamship Lines, Inc..
Pier 25, North River, for the men
listed below:
Harry F. Koehler
Anslem Snow
John E. Glynn
Harold D. Smith
Rawland S. Miers
Mark Davis
Juan M. Soto
Joseph J. Tardif
Joseph E. Leaumont
Theodore L. Simonds
Arthur H. Wilson
Marshall F. Smith
Abraham Chernin
,
Charles W. Prementine
Horace Stevenson

William P. Cronin
Manuel Floras
Benigno Beautista
Albert D. Nash
John A. Pritchard
Albert E. Meyers
Henry L. Scott
John Bouyea
Duncan E. McAskill
Checks and vouchers are being
held at 40 Central Street, Boston,
Massachusetts for the following
men:
John F. Wood
I Edward Silberberg
John W. Bigwood
Leo R. Mulrean
Harry Glock
James R. Frotten
Fred H. Horneman
» • »
The following members of the
crew of the S.S. Benjamin Contee'
can collect their overtime money
at the Mississippi Shipping Co.
office. 17 Battery Place, New

SEAFARERS

Page Three

LOG

Labor Draft Spells Regimentation,
Not Efficiency, Green Tells Union
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — AFL
President William Green assailed
proposals for labor conscription
as unnecessary and unwise in an
address here before the seven­
teenth consolidated convention of
the International Brotherhood of
Boilermakers, Iron Ship Builders
and Helpers of America.
Using the remarkable war rec­
ord of the members of this union
as his text, Mr. Green declared
that war production is proceeding
so well that a National Service
Act would only be likely to harm
instead of help.
The record breaking exploits
of the Boilermakers in the na­
tion's shipyards, their yeoman
efforts in helping to build 27 mil­
lion tons of merchant shipping
and in doubling the size of the
Navy received high praise from
the AFL chief.
He also declared that the
union's compliance nationally and
locally with labor's no - strike
pledge "has been as close to 100
per cent as is humanlV possible."
After pointing to the record
breaking totals of ship, plane,
tank, artillery and anununition
production, Mr. Green declared;
"In the calm and deliberate
judgment of the American Fed­
eration of Labor, labor conscrip­

tion as contemplated in the pro­
posed National Service Act, would
not add a single bullet to the
nation's war production totals.
"On the contrary, we firmly be­
lieve that the substitution of in­
voluntary servitude for voluntary
cooperation might so confuse the
production program and so upset
labor morale as to retard pro­
duction and set back the entire
war effort.
"It must be remembered that
only last November the represen­
tative heads of American indus­
try, agriculture and labor, joined
in a unanimous statement oppos­
ing labor conscription and insist­
ing upon voluntary cooperation as
the real solution of manpower
problems. From long experience
in the practical operation of the
American way of life, they came
to the inescapable conclusion
that increased regimentation does
not bring about increased effici­
ency. On the contrary, one of
the major factors that will even­
tually help us win this war is the
incontestable superiority of free
American labor over slave Nazi
labor. To deprive American work­
ers of their freedom through a
National Service Law would only
deprive our country of one of its
main sources of strength.
"It is argued by the proponents

of this dangerous legislation that
it would help prevent .strikes.
That view is not upheld by the
facts. Great Britain has had a
National Service Law since Dun­
kirk. That law has not prevented
strikes in Britain. In fact, the
number of strikes in that coun­
try during the past year has been
greater than ever before and
higher proportionately than in
America.
"Because it will not increase
war production, because it will"
not solve manpower problems,
because it will not prevent strikes
and because it may seriously em­
barrass the nation's war effort,
the American Federation of La­
bor will resist with all its power
the attempt being made to enact
a National Service Act.
"We call upon aU of our mem­
bers to prove by their example
that such a law is as unnecessary
as it is unwise. The national and
international unions affiliated
with the American Federation of
Labor have made a 100 percent
perfect record in fulfilling our
no-strike pledge to the Govern­
ment. We now call upon our lo­
cal unions to match that perfect
record. At this moment, vast
military movements are in pro­
gress and even greater drives are
in preparation."

SAVANNAH

What Ho! The Admiral

Shipping in this port is still
good and it looks as if it is going
to continue to be good for some­
time to come.

No more we'll "Shoot him at Sunrise"
Or shout for his downfall
For Admiral Land has made the grade
He speaks in N.M.U. Hall.

Had 7 new ships out from here
in the month of January and if
the next month is anything like
this we are really going to be
busy down here. So far have al­
ready had one out this month
and have another scheduled for
next week. Haven't had much
trouble getting crews together
with some of the boys coming in
every day from trips just com­
pleted.

No more "the arm chair Admiral"
Fox WE have seen the light
One year has passed, our line has changed
And "left" is now the "right'."
No more do we demand his head
And hushed is our hue and cry
For WE must "work" the Admiral
Or we are high and dry.
No more the sluss and angry blast
Nor insults hurled in jibe
Our eyes are turned on Government jobs
And so our thoughts we hide.

Had the Tulsa and the Shickshinny of South Atlantic in Wil­
mington last month with practicallj' a full crew placed aboard.
Also had a new C-2 out from
there for Mississippi.

And so we listen with silent breath
And print his every word
All is now sweetness, truth, and right
All is one sweet accord.

If shipping continues to be as
good as it has been here, will be
able to use everyone I can get
my hands on, as have been ship­
ping men as fast as they come in,
including all three departments.

Ah, silent is our political voice
And grave-like is our press
We need him now to give, us "tone"
To cover our disteess.

Steady as she goes,

He's now the "worthy Admiral"
We print his every quote
Te beguile the N.M.U. "innocents"
And keep our game afloat.

CHARLES WAID, Agent

Keep In Touch With
Your Draft Board

—Top'n Lift.
York City.
GEORGE M^ CROSSMAN, AB;
WILLIAM SZYT2, Bos'n; JOHN
R. STORK, AB; THOMAS J. McNICHOLLS, AB; GORDON L.
WILLIS. AB; EDGAR H. EM­
ERY, AB; CLYDE D. HAMBY,
OS; WILLIAM M. LAWTON,
Fm-WT; PASQUALE A. TEURACE, Fm-WT; and H. H. GAL­
LAGHER, Fm-WT.

ATLANTIC AND GULF SHIPPING FOR
MONTH OF JAN. 1st TO JAN. 31st
DECK ENGINE STEWARD TOTAL

SHIPPED
REGISTERED

2348

908

1302
1054
Shipping is slowing up?

808

4082

882

3018

• •J

�Paga Four

THE

JS.I.U. Gains
New Members
. .&lt; &lt;

~ • &gt;4 *

Demonstrating the healthy growth of the SIU the
•Finance and Investigating Committee disclosed in a report
to the New York Branch meeting, Monday of this week,
'that over two thousand new members have joined the At­
lantic and Gulf District of the Union during the past
quarter.
mend that the Secretary-Treas­

In commenting upon the stable urer be authorized to have a
financial position of the Union vault installed that will be fire­
the Committee reported to the proof and burglar-proof.
membership that they had view­ We also have acted as a Build­
ed the War Bonds held in the ing Committee and along with
safety deposit vault. They point­ the Secretary - Treasurer, looked
ed out that these bonds will have over several buildings and rec­
a matured value of $102,000.00. ommend leasing three floors in
The report follows in full.
the building situated at 51 Bea­
REPORT OF QUARTERLY FI­ ver Street and move there as soon
NANCE AND INVESTIGATING as possible. This is a very good
location as it is just one block and
COMMITTEE
February 14, 1944 a half from here.
We, the duly elected Quarterly We have also submitted a reso­
lution in the matter of buying
Finance and Investigating Com­
more
bonds and we strongly rec­
mittee, having been duly elected
ommend
that the membership
at the regular Branch meeting
concur in this resolution.
held February 7th, 1944.
Signed: Ralph H. Hayes. No. 348
Have checked the bonding of
Joseph Timothio. No. 5202
all the officials and found that the
James Malfara. No. 7443.
officials in all Branches are prop­
erly bonded.
• We have investigated the finan­
cial transactions of the Union for
the period and found tiiem in
order.
We have checked the books of
the various funds under control MONTREAL — An agenda of
of the Secretary-Treasurer and seven points has been prepared
have found them to be correct for the ILO conference to be held
with Certified Public Accountants beginning April 20, at Philadel­
phia, headquarters of the ILO
balances as well as the banks.
• We made test checks of various here announced. It will be the
•Branch financial reports, and first ILO conference since 1941.
1--?^
found that bills and income re­ The principal items in the
ceipts were listed correctly in the agenda will be "Recommenda­
Secretary-Treasurer's weekly fi­ tions to the United Nations for
nancial reports and that the re­ present and post-war social pol­
capitulation sheets were made icy," and "Future policy, pro­
out correctly. Also made test gram and status of the ILO."
checks of the dues record cards "The conference," the ILO says,
against the branch financial re­ "should be asked to proceed im­
ports and found them to be cor­ mediately to a general examina­
tion of social policy, and the dis­
rect.
We have found that 2013 new cussions should not be confined
members were joined in the past to generalities but should deal
•Quarter.
courageously with the practical
.• We accompanied the Secretary- problems which are sure to arise
'.Treasurer to the Federation Bank and on which governments are
^d Trust Co., and examined the entitled to look to the ILO for
National Defense Bonds in the advice and guidance."
'¥• safe deposit box. These bonds
Another item in the agenda
have a matured value of $102,000. concerns the organization of em­
' We have counted the buttons ployment in the transition from
bn hand and list the count below. war to peace "by which is to be
I#.I .
Buttons on hand last
understood," says a memoran­
report
1800 dum on the conference, "not so
Buttons sent to
much the question of the motive
Branches during
and general inspiration of eco­
Quarter
900 nomic activity, but rather the
whole technique of the transfer
Buttons in office
• 900 of manpower from war activity
Buttons received from
to peace activity, the short term
Mfg
3686
measures required, the problems
of training, of public works."
Total buttons on hand 4.586
The ILO will submit proposals
We have examined the com­ concern ing re-employment of
plete system of recording dues, members of the armed forces and
all financial transactions of the War workers, and on special em­
Branches and the Secretray- ployment problems with regard
Treasurer's office and have found to special categories of workers,
it to be very efficient.
youths, disabled and women.
We have counted the member­ The ILO was created after the
ship books on hand and found last war to promote social jus­
that there are 1800. There are 40 tice and improve the condition of
cash receipt books on hand num­ labor. There are 53 member na­
bered from 22501 through 24451. tions, including most of the Uni­
In view of the foregoing we ted Nations and neutral states.
recommend that the Auditors The conference in the United
Quarterly Financial report be ac­ States is expected to last three to
four weeks. Delegations from 35
cepted.
Due to the importance of the to 40 member states are expected
Union's live records, we "recom­ to attend.

ILO To Probe
Post-War Policy

If

SEAFARERS

LOG

MONEY DUE
FROM BULL LINE:
S.S. Babcock: week end over­
time in St. Johns. Dec. 4xh and
5thv&lt;1943. payable to all unlicens­
ed crew members at the com­
pany's office.
« « •
S.S. Dorothy; 3 weeks' linen
money payable to Stewards Dept.
members,
- K « K
S.S. Gov. John Lind: Paid off
in Mobile. Dec. 20th. 1943. Vin­
cent Williams and J. Driscol each
have 32 hours coming.
• • •
JOSEPH FEIRENCE. S.S. Wil­
liam Tilden: Has a division of
wages for 3 months and 8 days
coming. Collect at Bull Line of­
fice.
*
»
»
FROM CALMAR LINE
S.S. Stevenson Taylor: T.
PARKER. $17.57; A. IGNACIO.
$12.78; B. KLAKOWICZ. $14.78;
A. MOSES. $23.58; WM. PILJAR.
$29.97; H. MAKOWSKI. $35.58;
H. FALL. $21.98; C. DANULES.
$19.18; J. SHAFFER. $21.57. Col­
lect at Calmar Line office.
*
*
*
S.S. William Pepper: R. C.
TOWNSEND. $21.57; P. G. FOX.
$23.17; C. GOODWIN. $3.20; P.
PARRIS. $46.69; R. C. BELL.
$11.18; J. SPRIGGS. $135.44; H.
WATSON. $117.17. Collect at
Calmar Line office.
S.S. Richard H. Lee: L. WEB­
ER; DE LEON; COUNCEL; E.
COOPER; JUNIUS FISHER and
R. L. ALEXANDER. Each of the
aforenamed have $61.98 coming
to them. Collect at Calmar Line
office.
» • »
Sailors, Oilers and Chief Cook
from S.S. Lyman Hall have over­
time coming for past trip. Col­
lect at South Atlantic Co. office.
17 Battery Place. New York.
» » •
Transportation beef settled in
favor of the crew of the Cape St.
George that paid off in New Orlenas. January 1944.
• * •
Crew of the S.S. Eleazar Wheelock which paid off in New York
on Sept. 28. 1943. can collect
$125.00 attack bonus at Calmar
Line office. 39 Broadway. New
York City.

UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES
J. A. Anderson. T.C. No. 3649
A. Bercehell
Walter Bachman, T.C. No. 3209
Cecil Brock. T.C. No. 3654
Gaetano Cavalier
Charles Gedden
Richard Hill. T.C. No. 1728

Sydney P. Josephson
Arthur Krowe
G. La Rocca. T.C. 3462
John Loughran
Wm. Leiner
Wm. Madison, T.C. No. 3733
P. Naryles, No. 2720
Juan Nieves, No. 2389
Gasper Sansome, No. 22880
Rudolph Van Dyke,
T.C. No. 3241
W. S. Wilson
"T.C.": (Trip Card)
"P": (Probationary)

Friday. February 18. 1944

NMUOfficialsSaylt
With Musical Dollars
NMUMember Declares /J
Deception is the art of covering things up—so thafi
the members see the right hand without knowing what the
left hand does. It is the staff of life to the Stalinist leader­
ship of the NMU whose policies are bankrupt. The mem­
bership must be amused and diversion is on the order of
the day—the first point on the political agenda.
But at the same time that the^"
members are being amused with NMU members who refused to al­
everything from a hula hula to a low John Shipowner to put hist
jazz band in the shipping halls hand in their pockets in the inter­
the left hand is busy stacking the est of the Stalinist leadership and
machine in control of the NMU,
cards.
The old checkoff is covered up be a blow against the war effort
and made to sound respectable —and an attempt to interfere
by naming it a "dues deduction with a seaman's rights to sail?
Certainly, this economic
Plan." And the membership of
"putsch"
against the rights of
the NMU are to be forced to sign
the
membership
does not square
the cards in order to get their
with
their
never
ending screams
book stamped "approved." This
that
their
only
interest
is "keep­
is a queer conception of democ­
racy indeed. Actually such a con­ ing them sailing" and "winning
ception of democracy is to be the war." Their motive in slip­
found in insane asylums. It is ping the Check-off system on the
the very brand of "democracy" seamen shows that winning the
practiced in Hitler's Germany or war is secondary to their real
plans—enslavement of the Am­
Stalin's Russia.
Yet, these perverts of all things erican seamen and the develop­
democratic and the meaning of ment of the MNU by "evolution"
democracy have the unmitigated into a joint CP-Shipowner Asso­
gall to assure the NMU members ciation, Incorporated.
Yea, Brothers — dues "deduc­
that theirs is a democratic rank
tion"
sounds soft and musical but
and file Union. Loud assurances
it's
the
same old Check-off rack­
are given by these totalitarian
et;
even
though it's announced
refugees that the NMU is demo­
as
being
in
the spirit of Teheran,
cratic.
Cairo and Moscow.
No doubt they wish to impress We know it well.
the American Government with
—NMU Rank and Filer
their brand of democratic con­
ception as a working example.
Their scornful evaluation of
the mental average of the pres­
ent crop of NMU members is
measured by their artful pretence
and demogogy. The I.Q. of the
membership has reached a new
{Continued from Page 1)
low in their estimation and the Officials of the RMO in Wash­
Stalinist presumptions mount to ington exposed their stand some­
high heavens. "
what when thej'' were asked for
The "dues deduction Plan" comment and declared that they
sounds soft and easy—^like a sym­ would use basically the same pol­
phonic score. But its meaning is icies and practices now used re­
harsh as the blare of trumpets. garding off-shore and deep-sea
The shipowner will collect and personnel.
turn the dues over to parasites According to Government re­
who sit in their easy chairs. How leases the plan was worked out
will they be able to carry on their between "industry and Govern­
"never ending struggles against ment representatives," and calls
the shipowners" (if we believe for closely "co-operative efforts
their words) then — after John of vessel operators, the War Man­
Shipowner has become a full power Commision, the U.S. Coast
partner in sustaining the econom­ Guard and the Recruitment and
ic life of the NMU and aiding Manning Organization of the
them in usurping the democratic WSA."
rights of the members? Ah It is further reported that the
Brothers—this is a contradiction RMO took this method to control
which must be solved through all exits and entries to the indus­
the use of Stalinist dialectics.
try as a means of bolstering its
If you haven't got that "demo­ failing program on the Lakqs
cratic stamp 'Approved' " in your while furthering its anti-union
NMU Book you will be told that program.
you are not and cannot be a mem­
To this same end the RMO has
ber of the NMU?
recently gained permission from
Well, this correspondent is will­ the War Manpower Commission
ing to bet that the croupiers in to issue "certificates of availabil­
the NMU lottery won't let you ity" to many specialized ratings
leave in any numbers for that that will be recognized by the
means lost dough. They will try WMC. These certificates will in
and apply strategy and tactics. effect mean a "passport from job
The individual will be told that to job," union conscious people
the majority has accepted in a recognize, and leave men at the
"democratic" election or manner mercy of the RMO bureaucrats.
and that you, my friends, are the It is reported that the majority
only ones out of step. You must of the labor organizations who
line up with the majority.
represent seamen and inland
And how can the NMU main­ water employees have not been
tain its non-existent contracts consulted as to the desirability
without any members?
and feasibility of the RMO's plan
V/ould such procedures against to control all seafarers.

RMO Fosters
Anti-Union Drive

r

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                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
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                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
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                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
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                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
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              <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
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              <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
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              <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
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              <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
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          <description>The location of the interview.</description>
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          <name>Number of Attachments</name>
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              <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
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              <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
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          <name>Subject Line</name>
          <description>The content of the subject line of the email.</description>
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          <name>To</name>
          <description>The name(s) and email address(es) of the person to whom the email was sent.</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="25289">
              <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
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          <name>URL</name>
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              <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
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            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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                <text>Vol. VI, No. 4</text>
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>Headlines:&#13;
NEW SIU OFFICIALS ELECTED&#13;
ILGWU BONDS BUY FOURTH LIBERTY SHIP&#13;
SIU PURCHASES $75,000 WAR BONDS IN DRIVE&#13;
RMO ANTI-UNION DRIVE FOSTERED IN LAKES AREA&#13;
ALABAMA STATE AFL FIGHTS BRADFORD ACT&#13;
UNION DRIVES TO PROTECT BONUSES FROM MWEB CUT&#13;
FREY BLAMES 25 FEDERAL AGENCIES FOR MIXUPS THAT PROVIDE STRIKES&#13;
LABOR DRAFT SPELL REGIMENTATION&#13;
WHAT HO! THE ADMIRAL&#13;
SAVANNAH&#13;
S.I.U. GAINS NEW MEMBERS &#13;
NMU OFFICIALS SAY IT WITH MUSICAL DOLLARS NMU MEMBER DECLARES&#13;
ILO TO PROBE POST-WAR POLICY&#13;
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        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
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