U. S. Steel Corporation Starts Talks With The CIO Steel Workers PITTSBURG. PA. — The CIO United Steelworkers today de manded a general wage increase •—plus pensions and insurance benefits—in the opening contract session with the U. S. Steel cor poration. The specific wage hike sought and the amount of pensions and insurance desired were not dis closed. No comapny reaction was forthcoming after a twe *hour, shirt-sleeve conference. Vice President John A. Steph ens of “Big Steel” made a joint company-union announcement of the union’s demands. They were: “1—A general (wage) increase for the entire membership. “2 — Adequate pensions upon retirement or disability for each member of the union, to be paid for entirely by the employer. Compulsory retirement shall not be permitted. “3—Decent social insurance bene fits for members of the United Steelworkers of America and their families, to be paid for by the employer. These shall ih clude life, accident, health, medi cal and hospital benefits.” The corporation told the union previously it would not discuss pensions this year. “UNION INDUSTRIES SHOW" WILL TAKE “TO THE ROAD” CLEVELAND. — or<&<§) MV UNIOM is mV / BEST BET/ r CtofSS^tel riqtts, unions' To nvaatvt&VTV 'tYicncv.WC ^rom jirms ttatjd\sp\ay; /. .»/ mm labels, 7/ SHOP CARDS/> 5 buttons ? — ,**. **••**' w JUST AS OUR FOREFATHERS, IN 1776, WON POLITICAL IN DEPENDENCE, AMERICAN WORKERS CAN WIN ECONOMIC FREEDOM, TODAY. THE SHORTEST ROUTE TO THAT GREAT GOAL OF SECURITY IS TO JOIN A LABOR UNION, BUY UNION LABEL GOODS AND USE UNION SERVICES. .. UNION UUL TRADES DEPT. AMERICAN PEDEEATION OP LABOR L M. ORNBURN. S«r.Urr-Ti U.S. Chamber of Commerce Equals N.A.M. As A Foe To Organized Labor Organized business, as repre sented by the United States Chamber of Commerce, put 'itself solidly in the camp of reaction this month. On almost an assembly-line ba sis. 60 policy resolutions de nouncing nearly all phases of President ^Truman’s “fair deal’* program were given a rubber stamp “okay” by 1,700 delegates at the Chamber’s annual con vention in Washington. Many of the resolutions raised the scare that the Truman pro posals paved the road to “so cialism.” One denounced all forms of “government-controlled economy.” By contrast, however, the con vention called for retention Of practically all of the most vicious provisions of the Taft-Hartley Act. In other words, the Chamber put itself on record as wanting a free hand for business, shackles for labor and no social welfare legislation for the people. Same Old isogey Before the convention ground out the swarm of resolutions, the delegates also heard a lot of in dustrialists, Tory congressmen and other speakers, who brand ished the bogey of “socialism” against the Administration’s do mestic program. There was one significant ex ception. At a session devoted to the "dangers" of the “welfare state,” the Chamber made a ges ture toward hearing the “other side” by inviting Nelson H. Cruikshank, A. F. of L. director of social insurance activities, to speak. He was'pitted, however, against three other speakers who sought to tar the Truman program as “socialistic.’ One applied the label to government housing, an ther to Federal aid to educa tion, and a third to health in surance. Cites The Constitution Cruikshank answered in a man ner unexpected to the delegates. He read from the Constitution, adopted way back in 1789. to show that nothing in the Truman program conflicted with that great charter. No one, he said can brand the Constitution a “socialist” docu ment. yet its preamble committed this nation to “promote the gen eral welfare” through the power of the government This aim it reinforced, he add ed. by Article 7, Section 8 of the Constitution which gives Con gress power Joist Board manager and treasurer of the retirement fund of the dress industry, pointed out that the outstanding fact thus far is the unwillingness of most eligible workers to retire not because sf the sire of the pension but be cause of a desire to remain ac tive. The first pension check went to Ike Simon, 70, a cutter and mem ber in good standing for the past 48 years. He was one of 607 men and 381 women who will now. that they are 66 years or over, receive pension checks each month. AFL SENDS FOOD TO BERLIN TO AID THE RAIL WORKERS NEW YORK — Matthew Woll, chairman of the AFL’s interna tional labor relations committee, announced that the AFL has ar ranged to send $6,000 worth of CAE food parcels to striking Berlin railroad workers. This action is the latest ges ture on the part of the American Federation of Labor which, through its relief arm, the Labor League for Human Rights, dis tributed during and since the war thousands of dollars worth of relief packages to free trade un ionists ia Europe who are bat tling against the infiltration tac tics of Soviet Russia. Announcing this action. Mr. Woll released the text of a cable sent to the U. G. O., the anti communists federation of labor ia Berlin, which reads as follows: “Please convey Berlin striking railroad workers our warmest iolidarity, their courageous fight tgainst Russian totalitarian op pressors and Moscow’s menial German stooges, the Communist scabs, is vital phase of interna tional labor struggle for social justice and human freedom. In token of our moral and material support we have arranged imme diate shipment of $6,000 worth of food in CARE parcels for strikers and thsir families. Long live free trade unionism through out Germany and the world." Operators Fear A "Czar” WASHINGTON.—The plan by some big coal interests to set up a super-duper bargainer to deal with John L. Lewis brought on a congressional investigation today. The Senate banking committee voted unanimously for its small business group to start a probe next Monday. Senator Robertson (D-Va.), sponsoring the investigation, said its aim is to find out if the plan being considered by a large seg ment 'of the aoft coal industry violates {he anti-trust laws. Robertson said small and in dependent coal operators fear “(-sar,” as he called it, would lead mine management to “the same type of monopolistic control now exercised, and apparently by authority of law, over the min ers.” “Many of the operators do not believe our anti-trust laws per mit them to go into such an agreement, the end result of which would be to fix prices," he told reporters. The committee acted in the midst of a week-long strike or dered by Lewis in both soft (bi j tuminous and hard (anthracite) coal fields to reduce the abundant i stocks of already-mined coal. The way the 480,000 miners, members of the United Mine W'orkers union which Lewis heads, i responded to the walkout order dequpnstratod that Um workers, at least, are rallied behind a ■ingle spokesman. Lewis kept silent about the i Senate committee action and the plan to set up a powerful man agement bargainer as his pro tagonist. However.Lewis is reported fa voring the co-ordinator idea. Fre quently he has taunted the mine owners for “dismal lack of lead ership” and squabble among them selves. nuwcvir, i^ewis ior years has taken advantage of the situation, dealing with one group of oper ators and another, and winding up by making the entire indus try, both soft and hard coal, ac cept the best contract terms ob tained from any one of them. Right now, he seems ih the process of .doing that again. Hia present industry - wide contract expires in two weeks, June 30. He has started separate negotiations with southern producers and the U. S. Steel corporation’s mines. And he has asked for other sep arate sets of negotiations with northern and western soft coal producers and eastern Pennsyl vania’s anthracite owners. That was the setting when George Love, president of the big Pittsburg Consolidation Coal com pany announced the co-ordinator plan. He said a number of major coal operators in Pennsylvania, northern West Virginia. Ohio, Indiana and Illnois are consider ing Harry M. Moses as their joint bargainer against Lewis. Moses heads the H. C. Frick company, coal producing subsid iary of U. S. Steel. For a "long time Moses has had a big say in management strategy against Lewis. Love denied the co-ordinator would be an industry “csar" to fix production policies. In Washington today for busi ness meetings at the Commerce and Interior Departments, Love told a reporter the Senate inves tigation of the co-ordinator plan is “silly.’’ “That is something that is far off,” he,said. “It is away in the future and has no bearing on this year's negotiations.” Further, Love s§id he had ne idea whether the industry would accept the plan or whether Mosee would accept the job.