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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 12

Location:
Detroit, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2-B Monday, Jan. 26, '70 DETROIT FREE PRESS WORKERS9 VOTE IS MORAL VICTORY i 3 -Union Alliance Gets First Break in Dixie The Savannah drive was an offshoot of an ALA decision to zero in on the 50,000 nofi-union workers in the industrial parks ringing Atlanta. It was the first attempt to implement the ALA pledge to "organize the unorganized." ALA loaders consider nonunion Dixie a vacuum that sucks in runaway northern Industrialists enticed by the low wage levels, and fertile ground for new plants whose owners also lick their chops over the prevailing scales. Trailer Corp. In Savannah, had a choice between the Teamsters Union and no union at all in the Jan.

8 election conducted by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). William Genoese, the Teamster organizer who is director of the ALA organizing arm, believes the NLRB will validate at least four of the seven challenged ballots, enough to put the election In the win column. (Under the labor laws, a tie Is the same as a defeat for dues for a year would buy that many Cadillacs. 0 Management used radio and TV spots, the messages putting heavy emphasis on "out-of-towners" messing around Savannah. While Great Dane would become a Teamster shop if the votes are validated, the drive was a joint effort of the Teamsters and the other unions that make up the ALA the United Auto Workers (UAW) and International Chemical Workers Union (ICWU).

the union, which then would be barred from seeking another election for one year.) Genoese ticked o(f several gimmicks that veteran organizers grudgingly had to admire: 0 An armored car was parked at the plant gate, with a sign saying it would take a car that big to haul to the bank the employes' union dues for one year. Eight Cadillacs were deployed at the gate, with a poster advising workers that their BY RALPH ORR FrM Pi-ms Stiff Writer To leaders of the Alliance for Labor Action (ALA), the tie vote in the ALA'S first big representation election in the South was a moral victory, because much of Dixie is still virgin union territory. They are savoring the tie (346 for, 346 against) all the more because they say it was achieved in the face of a slick "vote-for-the-oompany" campaign that an ALA aide de scribed as "right out of Madison Avenue." MOREOVER, they believe the alliance still might pull this one out of the fire when rulings are made on challenged ballots. If they win, they believe workers in Michigan and other industrial states should be equally jubilant beoause, as one organizer said, "we were down there protecting their jobs." Employes of the Great Dane 1 rrh lie -rr -t fS 111 THIS COUPON WORTH 50 EXTRA STAMPS I I II Mot UIm Boor, Win Or Ciaarottoo At Kmmmr 11 I lI 111 1 1 I E'- Coopom Yoll. TV.

4., I THIS COUPON WORTH THIS COUPON WORTH 100 EXTRAvZfuf STAMPS i 150 EXTRA value STAMPS ON PURCHASES TOTALING ON PURCHASES TOTALING I H0TOJI4.99 SIS TO 519.99 Mot Incfmftn Boor, Wlno Or Clooroltop At Krogof Mot IntluJInt Bm, Win Or CloontH At KitlW Dot. Cat. Mich. Coupon ol Thro In Dot. foil.

Mch. Coupon Vdtd Jom. it, 1970. Jan. 28, 1970.

COUPON COUPON I I II I I I I I I I III I I I iwurvH I imilllH mi II I II II II 1 I in I III I rf. -r-ZZ. I BMHHHHaaiMHHBHiHBia UBHH HHII VuuuvvV kju i wuimwt I 7 W-' I I CMrpo. AtC Am ortn 300 Stomp. jL Cwpon Wpttl, 250 Srnmn.

I I rTC Om A 01 120 Ttttouol, 124.. 0 A Of S2S Through .29,99. Coupon Arm Worth 300 5run HT On A Velio. Of JO. OX) Or Morm.

AP Photo Greeting Returned Pope Taul VI blesses a group of sister Servants of Mary at St. Peter's Basilica before canonization ceremonies of a 19th Century nun, Sister Maria de la Soledad. The sisters, who are of the same order as the newest Roman Catholic saint, appear to be returning the pope's greeting. George W. Dahl, Head of Solvent Co.

PORK LOIN SLICED INT0 I Services for George W. Dahl, president of the Grow Solvent will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Roseland Park Cemetery Chapel. Mr. Dahl, 56, of 1111 N.

Woodward, Birmingham, died XV-- ARMOUR STAR CN. X'. fif ri I 1 ffjrTaT 3 I Saturday in Sinai Hospital. SWIFT'S PREMIUM SLICED He was also executive vice-president of the Grow Corp. and a member of Oakland Hills Country Club.

Surviving are his wife, Lor Ooeff Liver lb 66 SHANK II 1 A raine; a son, George a 1' PETER'S FRESH OR. SMOKED CHUNK STYLE Liver lb 9 FRESH TURKEY WINGS OR Drumsticks lb 39 RANDOM WIGHT PACKAGES-COUNTRY STYLE ntM "70 brother, three sisters and a I PORTION grandchild. The body will be at the Wil liam Sullivan Son Funeral lsL 57 Home, 705 W. Eleven Mile, FRESH RoastingChickcnsLB 39 CUT FROM CHUCK-BONELESS Beef lb 90 TASTY U-OZ Eckrich Smokccs "kg 09 LEAN FRESH PICNIC Pork Roast lb 49 Royal Oak, through Tuesday night. llWU UUWII LS PESCHKE'S SKINLESS wmwmt Circus Wieners.

KAHN'S Sliced Dologna wtpkg Burial will be in Roseland Park Cemetery. PRICE H.R. Cayton, Writer and Sociologist Horace R. Cayton, 66, sociologist and writer who had taught at the University of California at Berkeley since 1959; In Paris, where he was gathering material for a of his friend, Richard Wright, author of "Native Son." Louis Darling, 53, author find illustrator of books on natural history, including Rachel Carson's "The Silent in Norwich, Conn. H.

F. Lichtenstein, Area Stockbroker Services for Harold F. Lich tentein, 66, a stockbroker for 42 years with Hornblower Saief Weeks, Hemphill, Noyes, will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday in the Vefheyden Funeral Home, 16300 Mack. 8 VARIETIES INCLUDING Mr.

Lichtenstein died Friday in his home, 19962 Clairvlew KROGER CREAM STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL Sweet Corn Grosse Pointe Woods. FROZEN BEEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY Morton Pot Pies BUTTERFIELD SLICED. DICED OR I'Jholc Potatoes CHERRY i STRAWBERRY Irogcr Preserves Mr. Lichtenstein was born in Tltusville, and lived in the Detroit area for 55 years. He was on the management ad' u-oz 0 visory board of his brokerage 1 firm.

CANS EJ PIES Survivors include his wii'e, Jo; daughter, Mrs. Charles Bottke; a brother, Rudolph, and two grandaughters. 7-LB U-OZ CANS Burial will be in Woodlawn AY0NDALE BRAND 1 Purple Plums OSAGE FREESTONE NESTLE'S MILK CHOCOLATE. ALMOND OR CRUNCH Candy Dars AY0NDALE BRAND Cemetery. Smoke Kills Man Building Fire in Room Police said 67-year-old Hugh O.

Evans was trying to get warm Sunday morning and that Is What killed him. His second floor apartment at the back of a warehouse at 1425 E. Kirby had no furnace or stove. Police believe when Evans rose he built a fire in his bedroom to get warm. Someone saw smoke coming from a window about 6 a.m.

and called the Fire Department. Evans was found dead on the floor of smoke inhalation. iL 7-i-B SI .1. I l-LB Sfl 12-OZ CANS I Beer Boycott lomaiocs cans BEAN WITH BACON OR VEGETABLE WELLINGTON, New Zeland (UPI) Trade union officials in AVONDALE 0k 1 Si Cut Beets 9 cans 9 7I-OZ SB the small mining towns of Ohai 1 WT CANS and Nightcaps announced a boycott on local pubs to protest an KROGER BARTLETT increase in the price of a jug SWANSOFT WHITE OR ASSORTED Facial Kroger Soup. KROGER Grapefruit Sections AVONDALE CUT Green Beans or Deer irom 45 cents to 48 cents.

HALVES tk or Sweet Peas Tissue 200-CT II tZj PKGS l-LB. 12-OZ. CANS 'Caresse' Crosby, Inventor of Bra l-LB iillilillli 88 SIZE SUNKIST NAVEL Oranges SPECIAL LABEL I Giant Size Fab 69 NON-DAIRY COFFEE i-LB cnt 4-OZ JAR TEXAS RUBY RED OR MARSH A DOZ BAG Prearn SPECIAL LABEL LIQUID DETERGENT PPIfF SeedHecs CANDY Yams Quart Dove BTl 57 RICH TOMATO FLAVOR Kroger Catsup BTL WHOLE BEAN-FRESH ROASTED SPOTLIGHT mAIL 7- A id not going to wear a heavily boned corset, seized a pair of scissors and hacked off the lower two-thirds of the garment. She patented the Idea in 1914, but to her later regret sold the patent for only' $50 to buy a work of art. Born Mary Phelps Jacob of New York, her first husband was Richard Rodgera Pea-body of Boston.

A daughter by that marriage, Pauline Drysdale of Ifiza, Spain, survives. Mary and her second husband, poet Harry Crosby, founded the Black Sun Press in Paris and In the '20s and '30s published the early works of such writers and poets as Ernest Hemingway, D. H. Lawrence, James Joyce, Archibald MacLeish and Ezra Pound. Crosby, a former banker and a nephew of J.

P. Morgan, gave his wife the nickname "Caresse" by which the art world knew her. ROME (UPD Mary (Caresse Crosby, who published the early works of Hemingway and Joyce and invented the brassiere but sold its patent for $50 to buy a painting died of double pneumonia, her friends announced Sunday. She was 77. She entered a Rome clinic Tuesday and died Saturday.

A memorial service was planned for Monday at the home of photographer Roloff Beny, a protege. Mrs. Crosby was active and in good health last Monday when she attended a fashion show and ordered a dress to wear to a meeting with Archbishop Makarois of Cyprus to discuss her plans for a World Peace Center on that Mediterranean island. Mrs. Crosby literally freed women to take a more active part In the world when she invented the brassiere.

One day before her society debut, she declared she was I SB ba5 KROGER BRAND FRESH Half St Elali CTn 44 lYTH TH5 COUPON ON ANY 2 PKGS CENTER CUT WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. PRICES AND ITEMS EF- HAM SLICES L. o.io iw 't 'u- 'C IrM CL'R NO LIVINGSTON COUNTIES THRU TUESDAY, JANUARY 27. 1970 li Bfl WE 50LD TO DEALERS. COPYRIGHT 1970.

THE KROGER CO..

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Pages Available:
3,662,121
Years Available:
1837-2024