CRACK APPEARS IN PRESS DEADLOCK

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP88-01314R000100010067-1
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
October 22, 2004
Sequence Number: 
67
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
October 2, 1965
Content Type: 
MAGAZINE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP88-01314R000100010067-1.pdf811.27 KB
Body: 
STAT Approved For ReI ase 2004/10/28 : CIA- BUSINESS WEEK 2 October 1965 n and Pakistani Troops Beg!,, sk Along 1,000- ile Front with unfamiliar mastheads bloomed when most of the New York press was shut down by astrike-lockout Papers LABOR Crack appears m press deadlock In New York shutdown, Herald Tribune breaks publishers' ranks and resumes press runs as Times and Newspaper Guild continue negotiations on automation and jurisdictional problems Challenge, a. in., New Daily, Daily The Guild walkout at the Times Times-Guild dispute were the payds c for pe ;nsio uii nd Mirror. New Yorkers, hungry for city affected only 2,200 directly, but the " men's deman newspapers, eyed these new mast- strike-lockout at one time idled 17,- heads warily and bought the new 000 and blacked out newspapers shop; more job secuulrity if operations of tabloids sparingly this week, as a with a daily circulation of 4.4-mil- are automated, an a guarantee strike-lockout of six major dailies lion. Publishers estimated losses as Guild jurisdiction sction if j technological moved into its third week. "many millions of dollars." development The strike-born papers made no Making up tosses. The publishers Publishers said the Guild was, in e in- effect pretense of permanency- -tomhesurance lcarried by 1 by asstoc ation mation. The Gu ld andcmediatorstin hereere-today, gone-tomorrow publica- said the Guild tions to fill avacomcuum-and collect with the Theyl collect Insurance repCo,, in the orted ing alsway for automationvbut o was a rs bh 1d and papers, they filled in around the quickly soldout stacks of one regular morning and one afternoon paper. The New York Herald Tribune broke away from the Publishers Assn. of New York City last week- nd and resumed publishing in the e morning field. The New York Post, out of the association since the 1962- 63 strike, never stopped regular ap- pearances. Strike goes on. At midweek, the American Newspaper Guild con- tinued on strike against the New York Times, and five other dailies- including two on Long Island---in Publishers Assn. remained shut th e down in suppor,~re~''z'Release 18"' 11P CIA-RDP88-01314R000100010067-1 . ermu $13,000 for each weekday lost or asking protection or to o c one Sunday, to a paper limit for union's jurisdiction. ' $26,000 for a questions. Theodore W. $650,000 to to one per or r $2,750,000 for all under the insurance program. Kheel, one of the nation's topflight For Times strikers and those mediators serving without pay in the described the automation locked out, wage losses won't be dispute, recouped. Economic terms aren't at issues as "the most complex tackled stake in the Guild labor dispute. The yet." The problem is to find a wage pattern already set in earlier formula for protecting jobholders craft bargaining is sure to be and union rights, in a closely into- followed: $12'a week in wages over graded, multi ni technological three years. The Guild is paying strike bene- For example, who gets jurisdiction fits ranging from $40 to $89 a week; over a changed job? If a worker is depending on pay and number of transferred, and his new job is under dependents; its reserves are believed a different union, must he change ruins? And what will happen to him re- sufficient to last nine weeks. the The Directo ? w Cen ST T Approved For. Release 2004/X0/28 C f F = ~ 1 Qt( 1000 67-1 Approved For Release 2004/10/28 : CIA-RDP88-01314R0G91000f0.067-1 AR US C. EAT WATER We were assurred later that he said this and similar statements so that Harvey could hot out-law `n' order him too much, and problem. This was the reason, too, why 400 Ann Arbor city police are needed for Sun-, Now, the Argus has learned of some lead-. ing points of the resuif of Harris' special blue-ribbon commission's report on the not (mandatory - lib solution, of course], al- though the contents are still secret. The committee, headed by Dem Second Ward Counc;'-nan Robert Faber, recommends that se of street people, presumbably. This as- ect of the solution is also intended to ease been wondering if hippies REALLY bathe. Next, a city-built "soapbox" should be constructed, for anyone who wants to talk, er out a sickle or two. And the report re-emphasizes Harris' first ou se yes ere-y a ilized white majority-loving americans. We don't need you or your kind here-so get the rotten ideas. We are 190,000,000 whites to only 20 million blacks-so how can you win -you -can't-we won't jet you-don't ever Sock it to em T Ex-City Policem forget that. So Kelly [ha hal get lost you [Ed. Note: There are actually no less th smell. 51 four-letter words in this letter, which K.S. An American who loves our country why we decided to print it.] -our Country.. warrant or even probable cause. The r,S{upreme Court has not considered t that r e9c @ ijon, 5" 0d ct-QAkt be waived, but don't expect a lower court in Michigan to throw out evidence, This is a report to the community concern- jng money raised for the LSD [Legal Self efense] Fund. This is to show where the money went. PEOPLE BONDED OUT i.obert Gustafson, bond set at $1,500-LSD' paid a bondsman 10%-$150. John Staff, bond set'at $1,500-LSD paid bondsman 10%-$150. errors in .this letter. The syntax expressed is - the author's.] It is funny how you don't say anyt DRAMA @010001-0067-1 about The Ann Arbor Police force, but seem to be working for you now, or sh+ This writer heard on Radio Sta. WXYZ I say out of the office of Bob Harris, Sun. Aug. 4-your filthy mouthings. Why works for you. don't you "nigger man'.'-and all your rotten., The only reason that you cut Sheriff breed go back to Africa where you-came, vey down in your trashy paper is becau