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Leader-Telegram from Eau Claire, Wisconsin • 16

Publication:
Leader-Telegrami
Location:
Eau Claire, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

work of governmental and had peen very poor. To start 18 Eot' Ctoiro. Wi-l spurred by automation, and the Increase In working wives, wiU tend to causa rest with he had had a -rush of long trump af exactly th right time. 1 CARD SENSE O-The bidding has been: private service organizations which will drive taxes up ward even more steeply than in the recent past. honors to his head and insisted on playing spades In lessness among youth, -govern ment specialists say.

Toert Automation Putting Strain on Management, Union lar engineer technician stead of just raising his partner to three no-trump. Then This shin to the suburbs South West North East will likely be more juvenile delinquency, not less, de will hasten the decay of what 1 Heart Paa 2 Dla. Pass 2 Spades Pass 4 Hearts Pass groups into corapanywiae or industrywide unions. This, they believe, will give the less-trained the bargaining he had played carelessly on the' third diamond. If he had only discarded a small heart on that lead the bad trump break would not 4 N.T.

Pass 5 Hearts Paw would be the best time to jThey will seek preservation influence of the highly skilled groups. Automation is Intensifying come out with a new prod of seniority when an m- technicians call the big "core" cities, The rapid growth of automation will Intensify social problems for state and local governments In the cltUra, the suburbs and the rural areas, observers say. uct. These new machines pioyt la moved irom on plant to another in the same the push- toward bigger state will hit many managers as hard as the first automated and local government. company and a preservation By 1975, one worker out of machinery hit labor.

of pension rights when a man As workers are forced to NOKTO Zt A AS 1071 Q743 4KQJ9 EAST (D) You, South, hold: Spades A 7 6 fi. Heart A 8 7 0 4. Diamonds Z. Clubs t. Whaf do you do? A Bid five no-trump.

You are Interested In seven. TODAY'S QUESTION Your partner bids six hearts to show two kings. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow shift from cities and states GRADUALLY, managers capable of making only moves from one job to another In the same industry. But there is considerable seven will be working for the state, city or county. I the next 12 years, it Is estimated, state and local gov spite efforts sponsored by the government to find solutions.

A more rapid shift In industry will result from Inefficient plants being abandoned for newer plants elsewhere, from older companies dying out and from the Increase In decentralization These will combine to create more depressed areas. The younger, better-trained, more1 aggressive men and women move to greener pastures when Industry moves out. Left In many of these communities will be the older and less-trained groups. Such remnant labor forces are not usually attractive to new firms. to find new Jobs, communities will become less stable WIST pessimism now behind the scenes In unions.

They fear mis movement will tend to ernment employment 1 1 1 A 78542 43 VQ983 VKJB 8 AKJ108 routine decisions will become a drug on the market. The machines will push up the need for managers with roving Imaginations and wide backgrounds. Two grow by more than 44 per the first effect of growing au tomation will be a weaken loosen family bonds and thus weaken family standards. It also tends to reduce the moral and social pressures a- cent, to a whopping 10.5 mil lion. Total government fed lng of organized labor.

1-entlsts, engineers, female workers and a goodly chunk eral, state, city and county of this trend are: dltionally exerted in the old Is expected to total nearly 13 Since companies will need of other white-collar workers more uninhibited creative re er communities. In numerous suburban areas, the annual million in that time. Automated industry 'is mov Killer Confesses Stalking Women NEW YORK (UPI) An search scientists to keep turnover may run from 20 to 4104 47632 SOUTH 4KQJ109 AS4 82 4A8S North and South vulnerable East South West North 1 4 14 Pass 2 NT. Pass 4 4 Pass Past Pass Opening lead 6 have been slow In Joining unions. As automation increases.

ing to the suburbs. Factories are becoming smaller and ahead of the opposition, the new managers will have to 30 per cent of population. Such tr wfil make more dispersed. Many of the By BAY CKOMLEV WASHINGTON (NEA) -by a strange paradox, automation la going to put heavy trains on both management and the unions. As In national dctenit many gamblea In private Industry are going to become ao big and mistakes so costly, that one or two wrong decisions by a manager may pe disastrous.

This is the conclusion of government and private experts on automation, labor and economics interviewed In Washington A MANAGER can pick the wrong product, like Ford's Edsel, or modernize too quickly and end up with a white elephant while his l-val has leapfrogged ahead. Or he can modernize too slowly, like Studebaker's Indiana plant, and be out of business. He can let some tricky little mistake cause a disaster. Not long ago, a card was punched Incorrectly and an $18.5 million rocket was blown to bits. Relatively simple machines have been replacing the uneducated worker.

One expert estimates a good modern machine has 4he equivalent of a high school education. But this Is changing. In works are machines which be men able to handle these the percentage and the prestige of union members In the Bridge the churches more Important. IBM machine operator who nrowled the streets at night new suburbs are composed of unusual types and get the It will put additional de the elite of the automation searching for victims while work force will decline and the power of unions In Indus mands on the schools to take revolution managers, skilled over more of the role forme' craftsmen, foremen, en his wife worked confessed Thursday he stalked two wom trial negotiations will go ly played by the home. In gineers, scientists, technicians en and killed them for thrills.

down. AS AUTOMATION grows. and teachers. These subur some areas, parents and ed ucators already are com Winston Moseley, 29, was banites are demanding better the increasing labor turn arrested Wednesday as a plaining that schools are over will leave a larger pool and more costly services. THIS IS creating sharp burglary suspect.

He confessed knifing the two womt en. of unemployed, which will further weaken the bargain forced to take over so many tasks formerly the responsibility of the home, there isn't adequate time left for the fundamentals for which ly rising manpower needs ing power of union members "I Just had an urge to kill," for education, public health, police and fire protection. There is hope among the SOUTH'8 ERBOB OUTWEIGHS EAST'S By OSWALD JACOBY Newspaper Enterprise Assn. West opened the six of diamonds against South' four spade contract. East won with the nine and took the second trick with the king.

Then East led the Jack. South ruffed and started after trumps. East showed out on the second trump lead and South was doomed to lose his contract. Actually, he went down two tricks because West was unkind enough to ruff the third round of clubs. South's whole exhibition have hurt him.

West would have ruffed and could have led anything he wanted, but South would have made his 10 tricks. Have you spotted any other mistakes on this hand? There was one. East should have led the ace of diamonds Instead of the jack at trick three. This would have set up dummy's queen for a'dis-card. But that discard would not have done South any union men that as the sclen sanitation, street and i h- schools were organized.

detectives quoted him as saying. "I would drive around In my car looking for women, tists, engineers and techni THE SHIFT of new factor way maintenance, welfare cians Increase in the work and other services. Taxes are then I would trail them back to their homes." ies to the suburbs and the influx of workmen they bring force, they will find they must band together to protect will give rise to segregation- The confession cleared up their rights. Some union of integration problems in reas rising sharply. The sprawl of small communities being created with this hodgepodge of demands, often with poorly paid officials, is resulting in a patch the slaying of Kitty Genovese, 20, a barmaid, last Friday, ficlals believe that then they where they have been bare most out of them.

Since many of the operations of an automated Industry will take place in markets that are internationally competitive, the new managers will have to have a wider understanding of world situation. The unions in an age of automation are going to hivi as many problems as the managers. Most unions have decided they cannot or should not fight automation. They will drive for security and a share in automation's profits instead THEY WILL aim at contracts which guarantee that workers won't be laid off because of automation; that declining employment rather will be achieved by attrition as workers retire change Jobs; that part of the slack be taken up wlthshort-er hours and longer vacations; that workers be allotted a share of the new prol-its or savings created when a plant is automated. They will push for more permanent labor management committees to a to stepups in automation.

can tie the unskilled, the good, provided West made and Annie May Johnson, 24, a housewife. ly noticed in the past. These family movements, make hour by hour ol semiskilled, the white col- sure that he ruffed with his day-by-day decisions common to middle management. It started out as war gam ing In the Pentagon. That same technique is now begin ring to be applied to a decisions.

Machines work out the alternatives, describe the results of different possible decisions. Such machines can for example, be used to "decide" which markets are best for a new product, what research leads are the best to follow, what would be the best way to mlm tot finance a new plant, what I tin-' rriWi-iiml SEE THE ALL LLOYD ZIILMER III BRINGS THE HEAT TO THE MEAT EASY BASTING FAST BROWNING, SEARING STEAKS A tiger's entitled to something special: A set of tiger paws. And that's exactly what Pontiac went out and got fwit The tiger, of course, is Pontiac's new GTO. The wildest thin; in Detroit The one that's getting the raves in the road and track magazines. The tiger's pawis the newU.S.

Royal Super Safety 800. The one Pontiac picked as standard equipment for the GTO. Here's what tiger paws have done, in special tests for safety and durability: 100 miles at 120 miles per hour without a failure. 1 7,000 miles at 83 miles per hoar, 1 6 hours a day, without a failure. (And at this speed, tread will wear out more than twice as fast as it will at fifty.) They took 300 heat build-ups without flinching.

That's well above what they're ever likely to run into, even after a whole day's driving on the turnpike on a hot summer's day with the whole family in the car and the trunk loaded with luggage. (Whew!) They were sure-footed at turnpike speeds. They were highly responsive. They cornered nimbly and quietly. If you do a lot of turnpike driving, then you ought to have tiger paws under you.

They're only two or three dollars more than ordinary tires. They're atU.S. Royal dealers. And they're rarin to go. SPECIAL! is 0 (4LASTNOi) faaiocie TWO OVEN 30 INCH y.S.ftoyal Electric Range SEE TIETZ FOR TIRES AT CM Lift Off Lower Oven Door Full View Glass Door, eye level oven Full Width Storage Drawer Oven Ready Light Oven Lights OPTIONAL EXTRAS: Broil-Under-Glass; Hideaway Rotisserie; Cordless Griddle; Ductless Ventilator Tilt-Top, safe, easy to clean Automatic Eye Level Oven with Philco Adjust-0 Broil 23" Automatic Master Oven Quick Set Oven Timer Clock Dial-any heat Surface Units Automatic 8 Pot Watch Timed Appliance-Griddle Outlet 1 1 a mm W4it AUTO Quality Saving? Always ELECTRIC HOME HEADQUARTERS Lflapydl 705 Graham Avenue Phone TE 2-9741 2905 Seymour Jtd.

"Just East of Wyman's Supor Fair" TC 2-1601 Ask forWAlT SIMONSON 2221 Highland Avenue Phone TE 2-8311 'Open Mon. 'and M. 'til 'til 5:30 P.M. 14 UOYP SEL "DRIVE A UTTLE SAVE A LOT" FREI PARKING i Mil.

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About Leader-Telegram Archive

Pages Available:
1,057,987
Years Available:
1881-2022