FRIDAY. FEBRUA Y 22, 1957 Union By Co Leaders Defied st Longshoremen NEW YOR 41 fled their unio ' continuation of New York d tract negotiate. A hard core of ers is opposed t. would be deligh rank-and-file sew n . agreement. i l i , Feb. 21 (EP)—East Coast longshoremen de leaders today in a one-for-all, all-for-one a Maine to Virginia waterfront strike. l ockers voted during the day on a master con with shippers here in the nine-day strike. 1 anhattan dock its terms and ed to see the tle the whole ing the strikers ered on a con- Baltimore. Al t appeared im as pointed out ~- no general re e 8 a.m. Satur ers have been 16 hours ad- The hitch in get back to work cen, tract deadlock in though a settleme minent there, it that there could turn to work bef. day, since the str promised at leas vance notice. Contract eernent ! dley, president :nal Longshore (lnd.), had or triking dockers at 8 a.m. today tentative con- William V. Br of the Intematk men's Association dered his 45,000 back to the piers on the basis of tract agreement. However, the was unable to agreement with and 7400 Marylami ' out on strike. l l ' 2500 others rem., dispute'over loca A in Baltimore reach contract shippers there. ; dockers stayed ! Norfolk, Va., lined idle in a ! contract issues. 'hiladelphia and .usands of long with Baltimore pen defiance of to - work man- In New York, ' Boston, tens of th shoremen sided and Norfolk in 41 Bradley's return date. J Serious Defiance It was the most serious defiance of Bradley's authority since a 1954 wildcat dock strike was pulled against his opposition. 'We won't doublecross anyone," said Harold Bowers, boss of Man hattan's West Side "Pistol" Local 824. The local, which gets its name from its past history of violence, has been a spearhead in the cur rent ILA revolt. Fred Field, secretary-treasurer of Manhattan Local 856, declared of the impasse in Baltimore: "They went out for us and we will stay out for them." While the longshoremen's strike kept the vast New York harbor in a turmoil, a 21-day-old strike of 4000 tugboat operators neared an end. If a tentative agreement reached early today is approved in a vote tomorrow by Local 333, National Maritime Union, some 400 tugs will go back into opera tion. Increase Demanded By British Doctors LONDON, Feb. 21 (EP) Brit ain's doctors threatened today to walk out of the state-run health - service unless the government meets their demand for a 24 per cent pay increase. Prime Minister Harold Mac millan yesterday rejected the de mand and said a royal commis lion would be set up to consider the broad question of the doctors' economic status under Britain's socialized health plan. _ . The General Medical Services Committee of the British Medical -Association—to which all the 40,- 000 doctors in the service belong —decided to recommend a walk out unless the government agrees to an immediate settlement or submits the doctors' claim to ar bitration. Israel Denies-- (Continued from page one) the Israeli government. In Lon-. don, meantime, the President's statement came under fire from Laborite members of the House of Commons. The British Foreign Office said Britain feels Israeli withdrawal should be combined with a UN guarantee of free pas sage in the Gulf of Aqaba. Atomic Scientists Meet BERKELEY, Calif., Feb. 21 (VP) —A top-secret meeting of British and American atomic scientists is under way in the California Thea ter here. EUROPE 20 COUNTRIES, 70 DAYS SUMMER 17—51325, all maws BUILOPE FOE COLLEGIAN' 1111111 - flogesder Pitabirma Calltsailw THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA New High Seen In Living Costs WASHINGTON, Feb. 21 Living costs hit a new record high in January for the fifth straight month; the government reported today. It said the trend still points upward. Factory workers' earnings reach ed record levels for a January. The Labor Department index of consumer prices climbed two tenths of 1 per cent from Decem ber to January to 118.2 per cent of the 1947-49 average. This means it cost $11.82 to buy what could 17,-.t gotten for a $lO bill in the ,1947-49 era. The latest living cost boost means 1,400,000 workers in the auto, aircraft, farm equipment and various other industries will get a penny-an-hour pay increase according to automatic inflation adjusted labor contracts. ESSO RE.SIEAFteII works wonders with oil Laces and leathers and dozens of things .4,e1 ' 7, '" . ' ' 4 - , 54,4:•.;..;..... .... r . ..:: ' . 4 .... „,,, . ~,,,..,,...;... •t. i ..,,,,, -- f m, .e ....c.-..,;. :".;', 1 ~... ...„,,...?, ~.-,, ~..,,, . ;._ , • --....-: i. ~ ,, , r .:,.-:•• ;;•,, ' ~.--, i i ::;:klz . •••f•':::::. c i . - i..' : ;. • 1 .=~;~ ~~; . 3 . ; „ Ski boots lace better, stay safety-tight. They do so because the rawhide leather has been made tougher, yet more pliant with a special oil perfected by Esso Research. The Leather in the skier's boots, the wool in his socks even the lacquer on his skis were also made better with the help of products derived from oil. ESSO RESEARCH works wonders with ail. Mid-East Crisis More Than $6O Million Imperils Unity ei • . ;Cut From Appropriations Of U.S. Allies WASHD.GTON, Feb 21 (LP) could be saved . UNITED NATIONS NY Feb _Taking The committee said the min as cue from Seciel 21 UP)—A growing rift over UN! erals subsidy program no longer sanctions against Israel today im- tary of the Treasury Georget was necessary because enough f f the mai ial has been st - periled the unity of Allies ted H Humphrel , the House Ap- ° , l ex States and its Western on 1 p ed And it adied that the the Middle East crisis. Ipropridlions 1 propridlions Committee today, comparatively few producers. program was helping only a from new! ' With Israel standing firm in re- slashed $60, 794 , 000 some of whom. it said, are sell fusal to withdraw without guar-!a„ „„ nri tions re uested by the mg their domestic production antees from the Gulf of Aqaba PP. ”' a q and the Gaza Strip, UN delegates I Interior Department to the government at subsidy prices of $55 per unit and looked to the United States for The budget cut amounted to 12 i buy the next move la gforeign tun g s ten for their 'per cent, a much larger reduction I own use at th e II .S. mark et Britain showed coolness to sane- i l percentagewise than the two per tons at this stage and France, the cent trimmed last week from the price of $35. i The committee a 1 s o knocked third Western partner, is definite-;Treasury-Post Office departme nts tout subject to House approval ly opposed to any restrictions on request for the fiscal year begin when it considers the bill next Israel mug July 1. lweek a request for $25 000 to de- The 80 nation General Assem-I The largos+ reduction in new bly is scheduled to convene at 31 money for the Interior Depart- sign a monument "symbolizing meat was denial of the entire 40 the ideals of democracs " pm tomorrow for new debate on the Israeli-Egyptian deadlock million dollars requested for 1 Diplomatic sources at the UNi subsidized domestic Purchase of said the United States, on thei tungsten- asbes I 0 s. fluorspar strength of President Eisenhow-I and columbm- i-tanlalum for the er's speech last night appeared defense stockpile. !headed for active support of some l "Sec ret a ry Humphrey," the sort of UN sanctions against Is-icommittee said "in his recent ap rael pearance before the committee, Leaders of the Asian-African•stated the 1958 budget could be group were conferring on the text; cut and cited the need to resist, of a resolution calling for econom- public pressures that arise vithenl is financial and military restric- the government cancels a contract! tions on Israel for her failure to;or discontinues a buying pro-1J comply with Assembly resolutions; gram." and withdraw from Sharm el: It cited the minerals purchase Sheikh on the Gulf of Aqaba and!program as "an excellent" exam the Gaza Strip. ple of how the taxpayers money If your radio . • or phono 4. ,fr .. I needs 4 1 . 4'4 repair -. j NO- =-• - 7 4 LAPPI 9 ' ... You'll get expert, speedy service at State College TV . • • , PAGE THRE 232 S. Allen St. -• " Z . ,0 411 F Esso
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