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SuhjeCt Index to Volumes 74 ·and 75
. Monthly Labor Review
\faiiiiary to December 1952

UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Martin P. Durkin, Secretary
":::~:if. ·}~r
BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS
Ewan Clape, CommiHioner


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Subject Index to V olullles 74 and 75
January to December 1952

[Issues and page numbers in italics]

Absence due to death in family. Sinclair Oil Corp. Provisions effective, 1946-52. Nov. 541.
Absenteeism, United States. Sicknes;, under General
Motors Corp. group insurance plan, 1949-50. Summary analysis. Jan. 38-40.
Accident and sickness insurance ( see also Accident insurance):
American Viscose Corp. Provisions effective, 1946
and 1951. Dec. 635.
American Woolen Co. Provision effective, Nov. 30,
1951. Nov. 524.
Anaconda Copper Mining Co. Provisions effective,
1941-51. July 98.
Glenn L. Martin Co. (aircraft). Provisions, 194452. July 42.
Hosiery industry, full fashioned. Provision for increase, Dec. 1, 1951. Oct. 409.
International Shoe Co. Provisions effective, December 1945 and June 1948. July 33-34.
Liquor distilleries, as of April 1952. Nov. 517.
Longshoring, North Atlantic. Provisions effective,
July 1, 1951, or later. Oct. 412.
North American Aviation. Insurance p,r ovisions, effective 1941, discontinued December 1946 because
of California Unemployment Compensation Disability Act. June 686.
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Provisfons effective,
1944-51. May 549.
Shoe manufacturing, Massachusetts, 1945-51. Feb.

ernment, and miscellaneous industries; p,r eliminary estimate of numbers. Mar. 272.
Finance, service, government, and miscellaneous activities. Disabling work injuries, estimated number, 1951. Mar. 272.
Injury-frequency rates. Industries reporting highest and lowest rates for 1951. June 675-676.
Manufacturing and nonmanufacturing. Injuryfrequency and severity rates and injuries, by industries and extent of disability, 1951. Nov. 510515.

- - Injury-frequency rates. By major industry
group, 1950, with comparable rates for 1949. Jan.
91-96.

Manufacturing. Disabling work injuries, 1951, estimated number by extent of disability. Mar. 272.
- - Injury frequency rates. By month and by industry, first and second quarters 1952, with cumulative rate for 1951. Aug. 184-186; Dec. 644647.

- - - - 1950 and first 3 quarters 1951. May
547-550.

- - - - Selected industries, fourth quarter, 1951.
June 673-675.
Mining and quarrying. Disabling work injuries,
estimated number, by extent of disability, 1951.
Mar. 271-272.

- - Injury-frequency rates, by major industry
group, 1950, with comparable rates for 1949. Jan.
31, 33, 36-37.

172.

Sinclair Oil Corp. Provisions effective, 1941-52.
Nov. 542-543,
Accident insurance ( see also Accident and sickness insurance):
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Provisions effective, 1949
and 1950. June 682.
Millinery industry. Collective-agreement provisions,
March 1952. Oct. 419-420.
Accident prevention. See Safety.
Accident statistics:
Agriculture. Disabling work injuries, estimated
number, by extent of disability, 1951. Ma;r. 271272.

Chemicals, industrial, organic and inorganic. Work
injury rates by year, 1945-50. May 526, 531.
Construction. Disabling work injuries, estimated
number, 1951, by extent of disability. Mwr. 272.
Fatalities, 1951. Agriculture; mining and quarrying; construction; manufacturing; public utilities; trade; transportation; finance, service, gov-

Public utilities. Disabling work injuries, 1951, estimated number, by extent of disability. Mar.
271-272.

, Trade. Disabling work injuries, 1951, estimated
number, by extent of disability. Mar. 271-272.'
Transportation. Disabling work injuries, estimated
number, 1951. Mar. 272.
Warehousemen. Injury rates, by type of warehouse
and by occupation, 1950. Feb. 156-158.
Accidental death and dismemberment benefits. Gle·n n L.
Martin Co., provisions effective, 1944-45. July 42.
Age distribution. Tool and die makers. Movements between employers, industries, and regions, 1940-51,
effect of worker's age upon (chart). Dec. 608.
"Agency shop." Telegraphers. Agreed upon as substitute for union shop. June IV.
Agriculture:
Child labor. State regulations concerning minimum
age. July 45,
Labor force. Diminishing size of, resulting from
Lr..


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2

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

Agriculture-Continued
use of chemistry and technology; need for creation of job opportunities. June 676-677.
New York State. Child labor law, and improved
compliance conditions on fruit and vegetable
farms. July 46.
State legal restrictions on work by children during
school hours. July 45,
'
Underemployment in low-income regions-Cotton
South, mountain areas, and scattered areas-and
. remedies proposed by National Planning Association. July 48-50.
, Aircraft-engine industry:
Employment. Expansion under defense program,
June 1950 to November 1951, and outlook to mid1953. Mar. 284-287.
Skilled craftsmen, demand for. Mar. 287.
Aircraft industry:
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Wage chronology, 193751. June 677-682.
North American Aviation, Inc., wage chronology,
1941-51. June 683-687.
Ambulance charges. Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Prov:isions effective, 1944-51. May 543.
American Federation of Labor. See Labor organizations,
United States.
American Viscose Corp. Wage chronology, 1945-51;
general wage increases and related wage practices.
Dec. 630-636.

Area differentials in wages. Office, maintenance, custodial, warehousing and shipping jobs, late 1951 and
early 1952. Dec. 620-623.
Armed forces. Military pay and allowances, increases
in 1952. July 28-30.
Armour & Co. Wage chronology, 1949-51; wage changes
and male unskilled (common labor) hourly wage rates.
Jan. 56-57.
Assessments, union. See under Labor organizations.
Assets, nonliquid. Business and home ownership and
life insurance, frequency of at various income levels,
1950-51. .t,1.pr. 422.
Atomic Energy Commission (U. S. Government). See
Savannah River AEC project.
Automobile industry:
Effects of mobilization on employment, 1951-52.
Jan. 1-6.
Eµiployment outlook, 1951-52. Jan. 4-5.
Baby sitters. New York State. Findings of State department of labor concerning employment of children.
July 46-47.
Baking industry. Union scales of wages and hours. Indexes, 1939-51; rate variations and standard workweek, July 1, 1950 and 1951. Jan. 25-28.
Benefits and benefit funds (see also specific types of):
American Viscose Corp., 1945-51. Dec. 632-636.
American Woolen Co., 1951-52. Nov. 523-524.
Anaconda Copper Mining Co., 1941-51. July 36-38.
Candy and other confectionery products, late 1951
and early 1952. Oct. 414.
Chemicals (industrial) industry, October-November
1951. Sept. 288-289.
Coats and suits, women's., September 1951. Apr.
411-412.

Cotton textiles, March 1952. Aug. 147-149.
Cutlery, hand tools, and general hardware, late
1951 and early 1952. Oct. 417.
Electroplating, plating, and polishing industry, late
· 1951 and early 1952. Oct. 415.
Footwear industry, August 1951. Feb. 174.
Foundries, nonferrous, August 1951. Apr. 409.
Foundries, steel, December 1951. Aug. 180-181.
General Motors Corp•. group insurance plan. Sickness absenteeism, 1949 and 1950. Jan. 38-40.


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Glenn L. Martin Go., 1944-52. · July 40-43.
Grain-milling industry, late 1951 and early 1952.
July 28.
.
Heating apparatus industry, 1951 and 1952. Oct.
418.

Hosiery (full fashioned), provisions effective, 1951.
Oct. 409-41 0.
,
Hosiery (seamless) industry, September 1951. Mar.
292-293.

Insurance-carrier industry, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 420-421.
International Harvester Co., 1946-52. Aug. 171175.

International Shoe Co., 1945-51. July 32-34.
International Typographical Union (AFL). Tahu .
lation provided of kinds and disbursements fo
year ended May 20, 1951. May 495.
Iron and steel forgings industry, 1951 and 1952.
July 26-27.
Iron and steel industry, basic. Supplementary wa~.a
benefits, January 1951. Feb. 162-163.
Laundries, power, June 1952. Nov. 519.
Liquor distilleries, April 1952. Nov. 517.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp., 1937-51. June 680-68:".
Longshoring. North Atlantic, 1934-51. Oct. 411 412.

- - Pacific, 1951-52. Nov. 526-527.
Machinery-manufacturing industry, autumn 1951.
May 554-555.
Maritime industry. Increase in employer welfare
and pension contributions retroactive to Dec. 15,
1951. Apr. 437.
Milk-dealer industry, late 1951 and early 1952.
Oct. 423.
Millinery industry, March 1952. Oct. 419-420.
Millwork industry, late 1951 and early 1952. Vacations with pay provided. Oct. 424.
Mining, coal. Anthracite, health and welfare benefits, 1930-51. Nov. 533.
- - United Mine Workers of America Welfare
and Retirement Fund. See Welfare funds.
North American Aviation, Inc., 1941-51. June 685687.

Oil-field workers, October-November 1951.

June

666.

Pacific Gas and Electric Co., 1943-51. May 538544,

Paint and varnish industry, June 1952. Nov. 520521.

Petroleum refineries, October-November 1951. Jun e
663.

Printing, commercial, New York City, 1951, 195}!.
Dec. 638.

Printing trades (San Francisco), 1939-51. Sept.
293-298.

Pulp, paper, and paperboard mills, April 1952. D..,, .
627-629.

Radio and related products industry, summer 1951.
Apr. 403.
Radio, television, and related products; November ,
1951. July 25-26.
Railroad-car building, January 1952. Aug. 182-183.
Sheet-metal-work indust.ry, "Prevalence of insur.ance and pension plans," late 1951 and early
1952. Aug. 176-177.
Shipbuilding, Pacific Coast. Related wage practices, 1941-51. Mar. 303-305.
Shoe manufacturing, Massachusetts, 1945-51. Feb.
171-172.

Sinclair Oil Companies, 1941-52. Nov. 537-544,
Stamped and pressed metal products, late 1951 and
early 1952. Aug. 178.
Textile Workers Union of America. Summary of ·

SUBJECT INDEX TO VOLUMES 74 AND 75
"fringe benefit" levels, achieved in contract negotiations. June 652.
Textiles, Synthetic-. March 1952. Sept. 283-284.
- - Woolen and worsted. April-May 1952. Oct.
407-408.
Wood-fo rniture industry, August 1951 and July
1952. Mar. 296-297; Dec. 629-630.
Benefits, "::ringe." See under specific type of benefit.
Bonus, n qnproduction:
. Chem icals, industrial. Ext ent of practice, October~ ovember 1951. Sept. 289.
F undries. Nonferrous. Extent of practice, August 1951. Apr. 409.
.
- - Steel. Extent of practice, December 1951.
Aug. 181.
Iron. and steel industry, basic, 1950. Feb. 162.
Liquor distilleries. Extent of practice, April 1952.
Nov. 517.
Broadcasting, radio and television. See Radio and tele• :vision,..broadcasting.
Bu dgets, cost-of-living. See Cost of living.
Buildin trades:
Ho _ e-building permits, nonf arm dwelling units,
contractors' use of, seleeted months, 1945-50.
Jan. 21-22.
Union scales of wages and hours. Indexes, 190751, city and regional variations, and standard
workweek, July 1, 1951. Jan. 22-25.

Call-back time. Printing trades, newspaper. San Fran. cisco. Collective-agreement provisions, 1939-50. Sept.
298.

· Call-back pay. Shipbuilding, Pacific Coast. Provision
made effective July 1, 1950. Mar. 304.
Call-in pay:
American Viscose Corp. Provisions. in effect, 194551. Dec. 633.
Anaconda Copper Mining Co. Provision effective,
1941. July 37.
International Harvester Co. Collective-agreement
provisions, 1946-50. Aug. 172.
Longshoring, North Atlantic. Change effective
Oct. 1, 1951. Oct. 412.
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Collective-agreement
provisions, 1943-51. May 540.
Canada. Changes affecting labor in 1951. May 531-533.
~ andy and other confectionery products. Earnings., late
1951 ·and early 1952, and related wage benefits. Oct.
413- 414.
Chemicals, agricultural. Effects upon size of labor force
· and possibilities for creation of new jobs. June 676.f (i77.

r1iemicals, industrial, industry:
:,1 Hourly earnings, men product ion workers and
·
women production and office workers, selected
occupations and regions, October-November 1951.
Sept. 285-289.
Organic and inorganic branches. Employment
trends, occupations, work injuries, earnings, and ·
production. May 522-531.
Child labor :
Agriculture. New York State. Problems in law
enforcement and improvement in compliance.
July 46.
- - State laws setting minimum ages for work
during school hours. July 45.
Baby sitting. New York State. Labor Department
findings concerning oecupation, 1951. July 46-47.
Bootblacking. New York City. Street employment,
banned by education authorities. July 46.
Enforcement of all laws urged in National Policy
on Youth Employment [May 1952]. Sept. 299.
Models. Conditions of work in New York City.
July 47-48.


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Newspaper boys.· New York State. Legal regulations covering employment. July 46.
Performers, minor. New York State legal regulation of, and prevalence of occupation in New
York City. July 47.
Cleaning and dyeing plants. See under Employment
statistics; also Wages and hours.
Clothes allowance. Sinclair Oil Co. Provisions effective,
1949-52. Nov. 541.
Coats and suits (women's) industry. Earnings, hourly,
and related wage practices, September 1951. Apr.
409- 412.
Collective agreements:
Aircraft industry, during 1952. July 69; Nov. 551;
Dec. 657.
Airlines, during 1952. Feb. 194; May 573.
Aluminum industry, late 1951 and during 1952.
Jan. 68; Feb. 193; Sept. 310.
Building service industry, New York, early in 1952.
Mar. 317.
1
Clothing industry, early 1952. June 697-698.
Communications, November 1951 and during 1952.
Jan. 69; May 572; Sept. 311,· Oct. 495.
Construction industry, June and August 1952.
Aug. 202- 203 ; Oct. 436.
Electrical products, November 1951 to October 1952.
Jan. 69; Feb. 194-195; Mar. 317; Aug. 204; Nov.
550-551; Dec. 656- 657.
Equal pay for equal work. Prevalence of provisions,
1950-51. Jan . 43-45.
Farm equipment workers, 1952. Aug. 204; Dec .
658.
Fringe benefits. See under specific type of benefit.
Glass industry, 1952. July 69.
Guaranteed employment and wages under, 1961.
May 555-559.
Hotel Association of New York City and 10 AFL
unions, June 19, 1952. A u g. 204.
Insurance Agents' International Union (AFL) with
Prudent ial Insurance Co., Feb. 19, 1952. Apr. 435.
Lumber. Spring of 1952. Aug. 203.
Maritime. Atlantic and Gulf Coasts, November 1951
to summer 1952. Jan. 69-70; Apr. 437; July 69;
Aug. 204; S ept. 311.
- - West Coast, September 1951, and to July 1952.
Mar. 318; Aug. III, IV; Sept. 311.
Meatpacking, late 1951 and during 1953. Feb. 193;
Apr. 436; July 69; Dec. 657.
Mining. Anthracite, during 1952. Oct. IV, 433;
Nov. IV; Dec. 656.
- - Bituminous-coal, during 1952. June 698-699;
Sept. 31 2 ; Oct. III, IV, 433; Nov. 550; Dec. 656 .
Nonferrous metals, November 1951, and in 1952.
Jan. 69; Sept. 312; Oct. 433.
Oil industry, early summer of 1952. June III; July
66-67.
Paper workers, June 1951, approved by WSB,
January 1952. Mar. 318.
Public utilities. Electric-, gas, and steam workers,
New York area, January 1952. Mar. 317.
Radio and related products industry. Provisions
of 40 contracts analyzed, 1951. Summary. Apr.
400-404.
Railroads, November 1951, and in 1952. Jan. 69;
June III; July 67-68; Sept. IV, 31 2.
Rubber industry, 1952. Sept. III, IV, 312; Oct. 433;
D ec. 657.
Shipbuilding, December 1951, and in 1952. Feb.
195; A pr. 435; May 571; Oct. 435.
Steel industry, November 1951, and in 1952. Jan.
68; F eb. 193; Mar. 315; Aug. III, 202; Sept.
309-310.
Telephone industry, November 1951, and in 1952.
Jan. 69; Feb. 195; Apr. 437; May 572; June 697.

4

MONTHLY LABOR REV:IEW

Collective agreements-Continued
Textile industry. Cotton. Proportion of workers
covered by union contracts·. Aug. 145.
- - Late 1951 and in 1952. Jan. 69; Feb. IV, 195;
Mar. 315- 316; Apr. 435-436; May 572; June 698;
July 68; Sept. 311; Oct. 436.
Truck drivers, Central States, January 1952;
southern and midwestern firms, February 1952.
Mar. 317; Apr. 435.
Trucking industry, New York-New Jersey. Provisions of contract effective Sept. 1, 1952. Oct.
433-434.
Union shop. Contracts made in 1952 (airlines, railroads). Mar. Ill; Sept. IV; Oct. 434.
Vacations with pay. Provisions covering, 1952.
Aug. 162-167.
Wage provisions with various empiloyers over
periods of years. See Wage chronologies.
Work-stoppage provisions, 1951, by industry. Mar.
272- 275. ,
Collective bargaining:
Automobile Workers., United (CIO). Proposals
made, autumn 1952, to General Motors and
Chrysler Corp. Nov. 551.
Clothing Workers, Amalgamated. Contract proposals formulated, autumn 1952, for presentation
to Clothing Manufacturers' Association. Nov.
552.

Employer's duty to provide data for discussion.
Oct. 381-387.
Factors that make it successful. Mar. 278-279.
Federal employees' use of. Strike prohibition under
Labor Management Relations Act. Mar. 257-258.
Illinois unemployment compensation law, draft provisions determined by; method followed. May
505-507.
Public and quasi-public work. Implications for use
in. Mar. 257-262.
Typographical Union, International. Policies, including period following passage of LMRA. May
496-498.
.
See also Collective agreements; Labor and industrial relations; Labor-management disputes.
Communications industries (telep,h one and telegraph).
See under Employment statistics; also Wages and
hours-Telegraph workers.
Communists in unions. Measures to limit, suggested by
Secretary of Labor Tobin. Apr. IV.
Community conditions. Savannah River AEC Project.
Facilities and social changes. S ept. 269-278.
Congress of Industrial Organizations. See Labor Organizations.
Construction ( see also Housing) :
Contract. Employees, by industry group and industry. Annual averages, 1949-51; monthly, No-vember 1950- October 1952. See Current labor
statistics, table A-2, each is1Jue.
- - Production workers. Hours and gross earnings. Annual averages, 1949- 51; monthly, October 1950-September 1952. See Current labor
statistics, table C-1, each issue.
Employment outlook for 1952 as affected by Defense
program. Mar. 267-270.
Expenditures and activity, 1951. Feb. 135.
New. Federally financed. Value of contracts
awarded and force-account work started, by type
of construction. Annually, 1935-51; monthly,
January 1950- September 1952. See Current labor
statistics, table F-2, each issue. Annual figures
for 1935-49 discontinued after Mar. 1952 issue.
- - N onfarm dwelling units, number and cost, by
urban or rural location and by source of funds.
Selected years, 1925-50; quarterly and monthly,
January 1950-September 1952. See Current labor
statistics, table F-5, each issue.


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- - Nonresidential urban building, by type and
geographic division. Value, annually, 1949-51;
monthly, October 1950-September 1952. See Current labor statistics, table F-4, eack issue.
- - Private and public. Expenditures, total values,
by type. Annually, 1950-51; monthly, January
1951- November 1952. See Current labor statistics, table F-1, each issue.
- - Urban building authorized, by principal class
of construction and type of building. Annually,
1942, 1946-51; monthly, October 1950-September
1952. See Current labor statistics, table F-3,
each issue.
·
Wage-stabilization policy liberalized, materials and
credit controls eased, March 1952. May 563.
Consumer debts:
'
Indebtedness of specified amounts. Percentage distribution by income level, occupation, age group,
and family status, early 1951. Apr. 422.
Non-real-estate, as percentage of income, by income level, age group, and family status·, early
1951. Apr. 421-422.
Real estate. Increase in nonfarm home mortgages
1949 to 1951. Proportions of such indebtedness
in certain age groups. Apr. 420-421.
Consumer expenditures ( see also Finances, consumer) :
Instability of, as indicated by contrast between
1950 and 1951 trends in spending and saving.
Need for consumption research concerning certain factors. Aug. 188-191.
1950 survey by BLS. All families, 91 cities, and
for wage-earner and clerical-worker families, 16
cities; distribution by expenditure items. Aug.
125-133. Correction in figures. Sept. 262.
- - Interpretation and use of results,. Oct. 425428.
Consumers' cooperatives. See Cooperatives.
Consumers' Price Index. See· under Prices.
Conventions, meetings, etc., United States,:
American Assembly on Inflation-Its Causes, Consequences and Cures, May 18-22, 1952. Report of
conclusions. July 52-53.
American Federation of Labor. Convention, 1951,
highlights. Feb. 133.
- - 71st convention, New York, September 1952.
Proceedings and discussions summarized. Oct.
III; Nov. 499-501.
Congress of Industrial Organizations, 1951 convention, highlights. Feb. 133.
Employment of the Physically Handicapped, President's Committee on, April 1952. June 640-642.
Equal Pay for Equal Work, National Conference
on, Mar. 31-Apr. 1, 1952. Proceedings. May 559560.

Hosiery Workers, American Federation of, March
1952 (Reading), summary of proceedings. June
648-652.
Labor Legislation, 18th National Conference on,
Washington, D. C., December 1951. Standards
advocated and resolutions adopted. Jan. 12-15.
Machinists, International Association of, September
1952. Discussions, proceedings, action taken concerning union finances. Dec. 639-641.
Mine Workers of America, United, October 1952.
Discussions, proceedings. Dec. 641-643.
Oil Workers' International Union, September 1952.
Union's policies stated. Nov. 552.
Safety, industrial, President's1Conference on, June
2-4, 1952. Progress reported; workshop, discussions. July 43-45.
Steelworkers', United, convention of May 1952.
Proceedings summarized. July 22-24.
Textile Workers Union of America (CIO), April
1952 (Cleveland), summary of proceedings. June
648-652.

SUBJECT INDEX TO VOLUMES 74 AND 75
Union-convention schedules, July to October 1952.
June 657; July 56; Aug. 183; Sept. 308.
Conventions, meetings, etc., international:
Cooperative Congress, International, 18th, Copenhagen, September 1951. Representation, membership requirements, resolutions, changes in rules,
and preliminary conferences. Jan. 45-48.
Free Trade Unions, International Confederation of.
Executive committee meeting set for New York,
Dec. 1-5, 1952. Sept. III.
United Nations. Economic and Social Council, Summer Session, 1952 (Kotschnig and Lubin s.p eeches
summarized). Oct. 400-403.
Cooperatives, United States:
Banks, labor. Condition, Dec. 31, 1950 and 1951,
and development 1920-51. Apr. 425-426.
Consumers' associations, retail and wholesale;
housing and medical associations. Developments
in 1951. Mar. 279-283.
Cooperatives, international. Congress, 18th, International Cooperative, Copenhagen, September 1951. Representation, membership requirements, resolutions,
changes in rules, etc. Jan. 45-48.
Cost of living, United States:
Average family, 91 cities; and average clerical and
wage-earner family, 16 cities; distribution by
expenditure items, 1950. Aug. 125-133. Correction in figures. Sept. 262.
J3udgets, family of 4. Estimates for 34 large cities,
October 1951. May 520-522.
Family-expenditure survey, 1950, for use in Consumers' Price Index. Oct. 425-428.
Cost of living, foreign countries:
Food purchasing power of earnings in following
countries, 1951-52: Austria (Vienna), Denmark,
France (Paris), Germany (Bizone), Great Britain, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Switzerland, Soviet Union (Moscow area); indexes of
United States food-purchasing power and relative purchasing power in U. S. cents. June 658661.

Indexes, 10 Marshall Plan countries, second quarter, 1950 and 1951. Jan. 10-11.
Working time (in minutes) required to buy various
foods in following countries, selected months,
July 1951-April 1952: Austria (Vienna), Denmark, France (Paris), Germany, Ireland, Italy,
Netherlands, Norway, Switzerland, Soviet Union
(Moscow area), compared with United States.
June 660.
Council of Economic Advisers. Annual report to the
President, January 1952. Statements made. Mar. 288.
"Cotton South." National Planning Association, study
of, with proposed remedies for low-income conditions.
July 49.
Court decisions:
Absence from work, voluntary. Interpretation of
contract to mean employer would pay for, not
upheld. (U. S. dist. ct.) Dec. 651.
Fair Labor Standards Act. Airport limousine drivers and dispatchers entitled to minimum wage.
(U. S. dist. ct.) Mar. 310.
- - Airport-limousine workers held interstate
commerce employees. (U.S. ct. of app.) Oct. 429.
- - Atomic bomb employees not covered. (U. S.
ct. of app.) Feb. 188.
- - Company cafeteria employees covered by act.
(U. S. ct. of app.) Jan. 62.
- - Construction of dam, certain workers not covered. (U. S. dist. ct.) Feb. 188.
- - Contempt proceedings against violator upheld. (U. S. dist. ct.) Mar. 310.
- - Contractor clearing and maintaining rights-


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of-way :for power company, employees covered.
(U. S. dist. ct.) Dec. 649.
- - Cotton compress warehouses. Employees covered by minimum-wage and overtime provisions.
(U. S. ct. of app.) Nov. 545.
- - Crab-canning company, claw pickers held covered by minimum wage provisions. ( U. S. ct. of
app.) Oct. 429.
- - Crushed-rock production for roads used in
interstate commerce held under coverage. ( U. S.
ct. of app.) Sept. 304.
- - Flood control on non-navigable tributary of
navigable rivers held under coverage. (U. S. ct.
of app.) Sept. 304.
- - Guaranteed wage contracts of lumber company held invalid. (U. S. dist. ct.) Jan. 62-63.
- - Guaranteed wage plans, requirements of section 7 (e) not met. (U. S. dist. ct.) Sept. 304.
- - Guaranteed weekly wage, certain contracts in
violation of sec. 7 (e) (U. S. dist. ct.) Apr. 429.
- - Homeworkers purchasing yarn independently
of employer ruled under coverage. ( U. S. ct. of
app.) June 690.
- - Investigations, injunction to restrain, employer application for denied. (U. S. dist. ct.)
May 564-565.
- - Logging-camp employees in certain occupations under coverage. (U. S. dist. ct.) June 690.
Motor-carrier exemption not . applicable to
work not affecting safety of operations. (U. ·S.
dist. ct.) Mar. 310-311.
- - Off-the-road employees producing highwayrepair material ruled under coverage. ( U. S. ct.
of app.) June 691.
- - Recognition of company as "retail" not established by employer; actual knowledge of movement of products to other States not required' as
proof of coverage. (U. S. ct. of app.) Aug. 195.
Telephone-answering service held to be covered (U. S. dist. ct.) Nov. 545.
- - Truck drivers and woodsmen working for
lumber company held employees, not independent contractors. (U. S. ct. of app.) Aug. 195-196.
- - Violations of act. Injunction, permanent,
granted restraining employer from future violations; violations continued after empiloyer's promises to comply. (U. S. dist. ct.) Aug. 195.
Working during lunch period compensable
when work required. (U. S. ct. of app,.) Apr.
429-430.

Labor and labor relations, 11 major Supreme Court
decisions, 1951. Feb. 136-137.
Labor-Management Relations Act. Anti-union statements by employer (retail stores). NLRB ceaseand-desist order held "too broad and far-reaching." (U. S. ct. of app.) Aug. 197.
- - Back-pay reimbursement by union to employee
whose discharge it demanded without union-shopcontract authority-NLRB order upheld by court.
(U. S. ct. of ap,p,.) Apr. 431-432.
- - Coal company payments into welfare fund
held to constitute ratification of agreement entered into by Coal Operators Association. (U. S.
dist. ct.) Nov. 546-547.
- - Collective bargaining with union for "reasonable time" after signing settlement agreement
required by company. (U. S. ct. of app,.) Feb.
188-189.

- - Contempt of court. Employer who disobeyed
court decree enforcing NLRB order to bargain
with union held guilty. (U. S. ct. of app.) Aug.
197.

- - Contract violations. Provision (sec. 301) permitting suits by either union or employer for

6

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

Court decisions-Continued
violation by other' party held constitutional.
(U. S. dist. ct.) Dec. 651.
- - Discharge of employees concerned in unprotected strike, right to waived by employer in permitting them to work several hours. ( U. S. ct.
of app.) Oct. 430.
- - Discharge of three employees for work stoppage to present grievance held violation. (U. S.
ct. of app.) Nov. 546.
- - Lay-off notice not discriminatory because
short. (U. S. ct. of app.) Apr. 431.
- - Legality of unilateral wage increase granted.
(U. S. ct. of app.) Jan. 63.
- - National Labor Relations Board. Cease-anddesist order against employer who made antiunion statements held too broad and far-reaching. (U. S. ct. of app,.) Aug. 197.
- - - - Decisions. See National Labor Relations
Board.
- - - - Not authorized to consider charges filed
by union whose national organizations had not
filed non-Communist affidavit. (U. S. ct. of app.)
June 691.

- - - - Only a "final order" subject to review by
the courts. (U. S. ct. of app.) Oct. 430.
- - Negro cab drivers. Assignment to Negro sections of city, by cab company and union, held
not under , jurisdiction of act. (U. S. dist. ct.)
May 565-566.

- - Non-Communist affidavit. False statement
held violation, and ground for criminal prosecution. (U. S. dist. ct.) Dec. 650.
- - - - Filing provisions must be complied with
before filing charge with NLRB. ( U. S. ct. of
app.) Oct. 430.
- -- Picketing. Damage award against union, in
jurisdictional dispute, upheld by U. S. Sup·r eme
Court. Mar. 312-313.
- - - - In violation of act, under jurisdiction of
NLRB, and not enjoinable by State court. (U. S.
dist. ct.) Aug. 197.
- - - - Telephone company not enjoinable by
Wisconsin State board under State public-utility
antistrike act, because field preempted by Federal
law. (Wis. cir ct. Milwaukee County.) Nov. 547.
- - Refusal of employer to bargain with certified
union which has been repudiated by employees
within a year not violation (U. S. ct. of app·. )
Dec. 649.
- - State legislation to maintain proper employeremployee relations in charitable hospitals not
excluded. (U. S. ct. of app.) Dec. 650.
- - State (N. Y.) labor relations board enjoined
, from proceeding in case over which NLRB
claimed exclusive jurisdiction. (U. S. dist. ct.)
Sept. 305.
- - Unfair labor practice. Charges required to be
made within 6 months of occurrence of practice.
(U. S. ct. of app.) Mar. 311.
- - - - Employer's bargaining for managementfunctions clause. NLRB conclusion held to be
unjust by U. S. Supreme Court. July 63.
Portal to Portal Act. Required work during lunch
period not covered by. (U. S. ct. of app.) Apr.
429-430.

- - 2-year limitation provision. Effect upon payment of overtime compensation under FLSA.
(U. S. dist. ct.) Mar. 310-311.
Public Contracts (Walsh Healey) Act. Child-labor
provisions, violation of not covered by limitation
section of Portal to Portal Act. ( U. S. ct. of app.)
July 60.


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Public employees. State law prohibiting 'strikes
by, upheld. (Mich. Supr. Ct.) Jan. IV.
Racial discrimination by union (bargaining agent
for all employees of craft involved) prohibited
by Railway Labor Act, U. S. Supreme Court.
Aug. 196-197.

Steel-industry seizure, U. S. Supreme Court ruling.
Majority, concurring, and dissenting opinions
summarized. July 60-63.
Time off for voting. U. S. Supreme Court ruling
on Missouri statute. May 564.
Unemployment compensation. Available for work.
Claimant unable to do heavy lifting held-not unavailable for other kinds of work. (Ohio com.
pleas ct.) May 567.
- - - - Illinois law. Wife leaving work to be
with husband held not available and not entitled
to benefits. (Ill. Supr. Ct.) Nov. 548.
- - - - Not proved by claimant limiting jobs he
would accept. (Ind. appell. ct.) Apr. 432.
- - - - Shown by applications made for jobs.
(Ohio com. pleas ct.) June 692.
- - - - Seventh Day Adventists restricting
availability to times other than sundown Friday
to sundown Saturday. (Mich. cir. ct.) July 63.
- - - - Statement to prospective employer of intention to return. to former employer when recalled. (Ohio com. pleas ct.) Dec. 652.
- - Cab drivers operating own cabs at own expense, own risk, and for own profit, not employees of company leasing licenses to them. (Ill.
Supr. Ct.) Nov. 548.
- - Coal miners. Receiving pensions or retirement
pay from unions held unavailable for work. (Ill.
Supr. Ct.) May 567.
- - - - Unemployed because of labor dispute,
even though prior to dispute only part-time
worked. (Ill. Super. Ct.) May 567.
- - Coercive actions by employer held to make
work stoppage "lock-out"; hence, employees not
disqualified. (Conn. Super. Ct.) Oct. 431.
- - Cold weather not good cause for voluntary
"quit." (Pa. Super. Gt.) Apr. 432.
- - Discharge prior to date given in notice of
quitting because of pregnancy; employee held
eligible for benefits, also available for work after
discharge to date of intended quitting. (Ill. cir.
ct.) Aug. 198.
- - Discharged employee receiving payments for
accumulated vacation rights not eligible at same
time; but eligibility not affected by lump-sum
dismissal payment. (Calif. Super. Ct.) Aug. 197198.

- - Disqualification. Failure to accept offer of
suitable work, mailed to old address and therefore not received, held not to disqualify for benefits. (Ind. appell. ct.) Sept. 305-306.
- - - - Justifiable discharge as disciplinary
measure for absenteeism on successive Saturdays
held not to disqualify. (Ohio ct. of app.) Aug.
198.

- - - - Leaving work voluntarily, law providing
for waiving or modification held unconstitutional
because too broad. (Ind. Supr. Ct.) Jan. 65.
- - - - Quitting job without good cause could
disqualify claimant again for refusing to return
to same job. (N. Y. Supr. Ct., App. Div.) Sept.
306.

- - - - Refusal of unsuitable work with hours
3 p.m. to 11 p.m. held not to disqualify. (Ohio
com. pleas ct.) May 567.
- - - - Refusing ref err al to suitable work held
to disqualify for bene.fits. (Ohio com. pleas ct.)
June 693.

7

SUBJECT INDEX TO VOLUMES 74 AND 75
- - - - Refusing unreasonable offer of employment held not to disqualify. (N. Y. Supr. Ct.)
Dec. 651.
- - - - Taking another job after becoming unemployed because of labor dispute held no disqualification for compensation when second job
lost through no fault of claimant. ( Ohio com.
pleas. ct.) May 567.
- - - - Union member laid off because of production stoppage resulting from picketing by
rival union. (N. Y. Supr. Ct.) Dec. 651.
~ - - - Double affirmance clause upheld. (Tex.
ct. of civ. app.) Mar. 313.
- - Eligibility. Business-school student making
numerous applications for work and arranging
to change to evening school if job obtained held
eligible. (Ohio com. pleas ct.) Oct. 430-431.
- - - - Claimant taking sales training course
during which he would not accept work held not
eligible. (Pa. Super. Ct.) Oct. 430.
~- - - - Instigation of strike under no-strike
contract held misconduct resulting in ineligibility.
(Pa. Super. Ct.) Oct. 431.
~ - - - Recipient of pension under funded retirement plan of last employer held ineligible be~
cause receiving "payment by way of compensation for loss of wages." (Conn. Supr. Ct.) July
63.

- - - - Retired 65-year-old electrical engineer,
who had applied for work he was qualified to do
and which was performed in the area. (Del.
Super. Ct.) July 63.
- - - - Workers idled during inventory taking,
provided no vacation pay had been granted them
for the idle period. (Pa. Super. Ct.) Dec. 651652 .

--- Employee not actively seeking work when selecting regular employment away from home 8
months in year and applying only at end of season
in home town. (Del. Super. Ct.) Jan. 65.
- - Fear of physical injury in industry which
conforms to legal safety requirements not good
cause for refusing work otherwise suitable. (Pa.
Super. Ct.) Oct. 431.
- - Fisherman of 30-years' experience, who had
done no other work-except ship rigging for short
period-held actively seeking work when seeking
it only in fishing and related industries. (Wash.
Super. Ct.) Feb. 191.
-.- - Inefficiency not misconduct. (N. C. Supr. Ct.)
~pr. 432.

- - Labor dispute disqualification applied to employees whose union supported strike. (Pa. Super.
Ct.) Oct. 431.
- - Leaving employment, conditions of which adversely affected health, held either involuntary
or for good cause attributable to employer. (N. H.
Super. Ct.) Nov. 548,
- - Miners. Factors making two collieries a single
establishment in which labor dispute may affect
either part. (Pa. Super. Ct.) Jan. 65.
- - Misconduct. Unsatisfactory work held not
misconduct. (Pa. Superior Ct.) Feb. 191.
- - - - Misrepresentation to employer held misconduct. (Mich. cir. ct.) Mar. 313.
- - - - Refusal to accept employer's work assignment ruled misconduct. (Pa. Super. Ct.)
Apr. 432.
- - - - Refusal to travel on Sunday ruled "not
misconduct." (S. C. ct. of com. pleas.) Mar. 313.
- - Notification to employer required if benefit
award made to former employee. (Ark. Sup,r. Ct.)
Apr. 432.


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- - Part-time work held suitable work. (N. Y.
Supreme Ct.) Feb. 191.
- - Quitting job. Pressure by employer to hurry
ruled good cause for deaf person, formerly in
mental institution, quitting job and refusing to
return. (Ohio ct. of app.) Sept. 305.
- - Refusal of reemployment because of union
permit to restrict length of time worked at one
job on ship held good cause. (N. Y. Supreme Ct.,
App. Div.) June 692-693.
- - Refusal of work, by fur finisher last employed
at $50 a week, as finisher and sewer on ladies'
coats at $40 a week, held not for "good cause."
(N. Y. Supr. Ct., App. Div.) Jan. 65.
- - Refusal to work because of imposition of impossible conditions by mine employer held not
"labor dispute." (Ala. ct. of app.) Mar. 313.
- - Repayment of benefit payments required from
claimants who, by order of NLRB, received back.pay award. (N. Y. Supr. Ct., App. Div.) July 63.
- - Retroactive vacation pay not required to be
related to period in which unemployment benefits
had been paid. (N. J. Super. Ct.) Sept. 306.
- - Restitution of benefits erroneously paid. Not
required when applicant was not at fault in matter of overpayment. (Ohio com. pleas. ct.) Nov.
547-548.

- - - - Not required of claimant as he had made
complete statement of facts to agency. ( Ohio com.
pleas. ct.) Dec. 652.
- - Unemployed. Before "termination and separation" slip signed. (Tex. ct. of civ. app.) Mar.
313.

- - - - Claimant engaged in trying to sell real
estate, and not reporting to State bureau of un- ·
employment compensation held not unemployed.
(Ohio ct. of app.) Sept. 305.
- - - - During so-called "vacation periods."
(N. Y. Supr. Ct.) June 692.
- - - - Lay-off prior to labor dispute. (Mich.
cir. ct.) Aug. 198.
- - - - Meaning of. (Wash. Super. Ct.) Feb.
191.

- - Voluntary leaving of job, petty irritations in
working conditions not good cause for. (Ala. ct.
of app.) J an. 65.
- - Voluntary quit because not able to work overtime that employer required, held for "good
cause." (Ohio com. pleas. ct.) May. 567.
- - Work as branch store assistant manager in
New Jersey for 9 months not included under New
York law, held not incidental to regular job as
clerk for same employer in New York. (N. Y.
Supr. Ct., App. Div.) Sept. 306.
- - Work stoppage, after strike against two employers caused lockout by other employers in association, held due to strike rather than to lockout. (Utah Supr. Ct.) July 63.
Unincorporated associations doing business in Tenn.
Statute, providing for substituted service of process on, ruled constitutional. (State ct. of app.)
Nov. 547.

Veterans' reemployment statutes. Damage claim
account employer's denial of restoration unaffected by laches or statutes of limitations. (U. S.
ct. of app.) Feb. 190.
- - Discharge after failure to take examination
required for promotion not "without cause."
(U. S. ct. of app,.) June 692.
- - Position with "like" seniority, status, and pay
in compliance with statutes. (U. S. ct. of app.)
Jan. 66.

- - Preferential

seniority

:for

new

veteran

8

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

Court decision&---Continued
employees invalid as to effect on reemployed veterans. (U. S. ct. of app.) May 566-567. ,
- - Vacation clause in union contract not in conflict with reemp,Ioyment laws. (U. S. ct. of app.)
Jan. 65-66.
- - No immunity from lay-off during military
service nor from its effect on seniority record.
(N. J. dist. ct.) Nov. 547.
"Yellow dog" contract, under which employees
claimed reward as promised for refraining from
joining union, declared void and unenforceable
under New York law. (N. Y. Supr. Ct.) Aug.
196.

Credit controls. Housing. Restrictions on mortgages on
1- to 4-family houses relaxed June 11, 1952, by revision of Regulation X. July 52.
Current labor statistics. See under specific subject.
Cutlery, hand tools and general hardware. Earnings in
selected occupations and areas, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 416-417.
Defense, national. See Defense program.
Defense Production Act, United States. Labor's attitude toward new act passed July 1951. Feb. 133.
Defense Production Act Amendments of June 30, 1952:
Cha;nges in extent of Government authority to control wages, prices, and rents summarized. Aug.
191-192.

Effects on price controls, consumer credit, and construction-credit controls, rent and wage controls;
change made in composition and functions of
Wage Stabilization Board. July III, IV; Aug.
191-192.

President requested to use national emergency provisions of Labor Management Relations Act, 1947,
to end steel strike. June Ill; Aug. 192, 201-202.
Provision exempting wage rates of $1 or less from
controls, and general wage regulation of October
1952 to effectuate. Dec. 658.
Defense program. Director of Defense Mobilization,
quarterly reports, January, April, July, and October,
1952 summaries. Feb. 177; May 534; Aug. 186-187;
Nov. 521-522.
Demotion pay allowance. Sinclair Oil Corp. Provisions
effective, 1941-52. Nov. 541.
Dirty work. Shipbuilding, West Coast. Provisions effective, 1941-51. Mar. 305.
Disability and dismemberment benefit plan. International Harvester Co., Collective-agreement provisions,
1946-50. Aug. 174.
Displaced persons. Objectives and operation of program
to 1952. General characteristics, areas of original settlement, residence, and job adjustments, contribution
to American economy. Dec. 611-614.
Down-time pay:
American Viscose Corp. Provisions effective, 1945
and 1946. Dec. 634.
American Woolen Co. Provisions effective, Oct. 1,
1951. Nov. 524.
International Harvester Co. Collective-agreement
provision, 1946-50. Aug. 172.
International Shoe Co. Collective-agreement provision, 1945. July 33. ,
Shoe manufacturing, Massachusetts, 1945-51. Feb.
171.

Dues, union. See under Labor organizations.
Earnings series, net spendable. Bureau of Labor Statistics series, calculation and uses of. Mwr. 906-909.
Economic conditions, United States:
Adjustments, after defense expenditures reach
peak. Address by Isador Lubin to 1952 summer


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session of U. N. Economic and Social Council.
Oct. 401-403.
Causes of general economic expansion evaluated by
French study group, November 1951. Feb. 125129.

Consumer spending, effect of instability in. Aug.
188-191.

Goals set forth in President's, State of the Union
message, January 1952. Jan. III.
Monthly appraisals. See Labor Month in Review,
each issue Mar.-Dec.
Reports of the President ( State of the Union and
Budget Message and Economic Report) and of
the Council of Economic Advisers. Mar. 287-289.
Economic conditions, Japan. Postwar; during, and at
end of, Occupation. Oct. 395-399.
Economic Stabilization Agency (U. S. Government).
Administrator's resignation, November 1951. Summary analysis. Jan. 55-56.
Electrical-equipment manufacturing. Nature of industry, employment trends, 1939-52; workers' weekly and
hourly earnings, 1947-52; and employment outlook for
late 1952 and year 1953. Nov. 507-510.
Electronics industry. Employment and production,
1950-51. Feb. 151-154.
Electroplating, plating, and polishing industry. Earnings in selected occupations and areas, late 1951 and
early 1952. Oct. 414-415.
Emergency work. Pacific' Gas and Electric Co. Provisions, 1943-51. May 542.
Employers' associations. Bituminous Coal Operators
Association joined by most Indiana and Illinois softcoal producers formerly unwilling to join. June 698699.

Employment agencies. U. S. Employment Service.
Methods and program; aids in measuring employers'
needs. May 499-504.
Employment conditions:
Aircraft-engine industry, 1950-51, and estimated
to 1953. Mar. 284-287.
Automobile industry. Production worker employment, 1939-51; effects of materials shortages and
defense activities, 1951-52. Jan. 1-6.
Changes, by month. See The Labor Month in Review, each issue.
Employment and unemployment, 1951. Feb. 134135.

Full employment, evaluation of causes, in light of
current French problems, by French study group
in United States, November 1951. Feb. 125-129.
Employment outlook:
Aircraft-engine industry, to mid-1953, estimate.
Mar. , 286-287.
Automobile industry, 1951-52. Jan. 4-5.
Construction industry, 1952, as affected by defense
program. Mwr. 267-270.
Electrical-equipment industry, late 1952 and year
1953. Nov. 507-510.
Metal mining, in defense production, 1952-55. Apr.
385.

Trucking industry, 1951-52. Jan. 31.
Employment statistics:
Chemicals, industrial. Inorganic: By year, 193951. May 530.
- - Organic. Number of workers, by year, 193951; by region, 1939 and 1951. May 525.
Cleaning and dyeing plants. Annual averages
1949-51; monthly, November 1950-October 1952:
~ee Current labor statistics, table A-2, each
issue.
Communication (telephone and telegraph). Annual
averages, 1949-51; monthly, November 1950-October 1952. See Current labor statistics table
A-2, each, issue.
'

•

SUBJECT INDEX TO VOLUMES 74 AND 75

Electrical-equipment industry, trends, 1939 to 1952.
Nov. 507-509.
Electronics industry, 1950-51. Feb. 151-154.
Federal civilian employees. Continental United
States and outside, by branch and agency group.
Annual averages, 1949-51; monthly, November
1950-October 1952. See Current labor statistics,
table A- 5, each issue. Payroll figures discontinued after Oct. 1952 issue.
- - Washington, D. C., and District of Columbia
Government, by branch and agency group. Annual averages, 1949-51; monthly, November
1950-October 1952. See Current labor statistics,
table .A-6, each issue. Payroll figures discontinued after Oct. 1952 issue.
Federal white-collar workers. Number inside and
outside Washington, D. C., June 30, 1947 and
1951, by occupational group; engineers in various specialties, 1951; specified occupational
groups, 1938, 1947, 1951; distribution, 1951, by
Government agency. Nov. 489-493.
Finance (banking, securities,, insurance, real estate, and other establishments), by industry. Annual averages, 1949-51; monthly, November
1950-October 1952. See Current labor statistics,
table A-2, each issue.
Government (Federal, State, and local). Annual
averages, 1949-51; monthly, November 1950October 1952. S ee Current labor statistics, table
A-2, each issue,.
Hotels and lodging places. Annual averages, 194951; monthly, November 1950- October 1952. Se'e
Current labor statistics, table A-2, each issue.
Insured unemployment, under St ate unemploymentinsurance programs, by geographic division and
State, monthly, October 1950-September 1952.
See Current labor statistics, table A-9, each
issue.
'
Job tenure with same employer, decade ending
1951. Sept. 257-262.
Labor force, civilian, by employment status, hours
worked, and sex, monthly, Novembe,r 1950-October 1952. See Current labor statistics, table
A-1, each issue.
Laundries. Annual averages, 1949-51; monthly,
November 1950-October 1952. See Current labor
statistics, table A-2, each issue.
Manufacturing. By State, annual average, 1947;
by month, December 1950-September 1952. See
Current labor statistics, table A-8, Mar., June,
Sept., and Dec. issues.
- - Production workers. By industry group and
industry. Annual averages, 1949-51; monthly,
November 1950-October 1952. See Current labor
statistics, table A-3, each issue.
- - - - Indexes (1947-49
100), employment
and weekly payrolls. Annual averages, 1939-51;
monthly, November 1950-October 1952. See Current labor statistics, table A-4, each issue.
Metal mining, 1939-50. Apr. 382.
Mining, production workers. By industry group and
industry, annual averages, 1949-51; monthly,
November 1950-October 1952. See Current labor
statistics, table A-3, each issue.
Motion pictures. Annual averages, 1949-51; monthly, November 1950-September 1952. See Current
labor statistics, table A-2, each issue.
Nonagricultural establishments. By industry division and group, annual averages, 1949-51;
monthly, November 1950-October 1952. See Current labor statistics, table A-2, each issue.
- - Selected States, annual averages, 1947;
monthly, December 1950-September 1952. See

=


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9

Current labor statistics, table A-7, Mar., June,
Sept., and Dec. issues.
Ordnance manufacture, working force. Increase
since June 1950; percentag~ distribution, first
quarter 1952, by region. Aug. 159-161.
Public utilities ( communications, telephone and telegraph; electric light and power; gas.). Annual
averages, 1949-51; monthly, November 1950-October 1952. See Current labor statistics, table
A-2, each issue.
Ship construction and repairing, March 1952. July
7-11.
Trade (retail, by types of stores, and wholesale).
Annual averages, 1949-51; monthly, November
1950-October 1952. See Current labor statistics,
table A-2, each issue.
Transportation industry. Annual averages, 194951; monthly, November 1950-October 1952. See
Current labor statistics, table A-2, each issue.
Engineers. Aircraft-engine industry's need for, 1952.
Mar. 287.
Equal pay for equal work:
National conference on, Washington, D. C., Mar.
.31 and Apr. 1, 1952. May 559-560.
Private and public policies and collective-bargaining provisions, 1950-51. Jan. 41-45.
Escalator clauses:
Extent and terms in union agreements, Marshall
Plan countries, 1951. Jan. 7-11. Addendum top.
10 of article. Apr. 428.
Sales contracts. Use of BLS data to calculate price
adjustments (technical note). July 57-59.
Expenditures:
Construction, new, private and public. By type, totals for years 1950-51; by months, December
1950-October 1952. See Current labor statistics,
table F-1, each issue.
Consumer. See Consumer expenditures.
"Fringe" benefits, selected, for plant workers, basic
iron and steel industry, 1950. Feb. 160-169.
Faulty-materials allowance. International Harvester
Co. Collective-agreement provisions, 1946. Aug. 179.
Federal employees:
Classified. Salary increases, 1950-51, and indexes
of pay changes, 1939-51, by selected grades. May
545-547.
Salary changes under C1assification Act of 1949 as
amended October 1951; annual and sick leave
provisions of 1950, 1951, and 1952. Apr. 416-417.
White-collar workers. Number employed, 1938,
1947, and 1951; salaries, June 30, 1951, by- occupational group; grade system effective June
1951; in-grade steps, and salary ranges. Nov.
489-494.
See also Employment statistics; and Wages and
hours.
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service. Dispute
notices and requests for assistance received and intercessions by the Service, 1951. Feb. 195.
Finance (banking, securities, insurance, real estate, and
other establishments). See Employment statistics;
and Wages and hours.
Finances, consumer. Survey (Board of Governors, Federal Reserve System). Spending and saving plans for
1952, summary of preliminary findings. June, 672673.
Firemen, United States. Cities of 100,000 population
or more. Indexes of salary rates, 1924-51; percentage
distribution, according to increase in salary scales,
1950-51. Jan. 52-53.
Fishing industry. Annual earnings of fishermen attached to Boston Fish Pier Fleet, by occupation and
number of days worked. June 666-670.

10

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

Footwear industry, United States:
Hourly earnings, selected occupations, by process
and wage area, and related wage practices, August 1951. Feb. 172-174.
Shoe manufacturing, Massachusetts, 1945-51. Wage
changes, minimum plant hourly rates, and related
wage practices. Feb. 169-172 .
Foremen, training of. Fin.dings of su_rveys made ?Y
Bureau of National Affairs and Natrnnal Industrial
Conference Board. July 54-56.
Foundries:
Gray iron. Productivity trends, 1946-50. Apr. 404406.

Nonferrous. Earnings, hourly, by occupations, selected regions, August 1951·, and related wage
practices. Apr. 406-409 .'
.
Fringe issues. Information sought by umon from employers for collective bargaining. Oct. 385-386.
General Motors Corp·. Sickness absenteeism under group
insurance plan, 1949-50. Summary analysis. Jan.
38-40.

Government employees, Federal. See Federal employees.
Government-labor relations, United States. Industrial
Relations Research Association discussion of, 4th annual meeting, Boston, December 1951. Feb. 145-150.
Government seizure, United States:
Railroads. Controls exercised August 1950 to May
23, 1952. Feb. 135; Apr. III, IV; May 514-515,
571; June III; July 66-68.

- - Federal control ended May 1952. July 66, 68.
Steel industry (Apr. 8) to avert strike. Apr. III;
May Ill, 568.
Grain-milling industry. Hourly earnings, certain o_ccupations in selected areas, and related wage practices,
late 1951 and early 1952. July 27-28.
Guaranteed employment and guaranteed wage. Plans
provided by small proportion of collective agreements.
Analyses. May 555-559.
Handicapped workers, President's Committee on Employment of. April 1952 meeting. Discussion and reports summarized. June 640-642.
Health insurance or benefits:
American Woolen Co. Provisions effective, Nov. 30,
1951. Nov. 524.
Candy and other confectionery products, late 1951
and early 1952. Oct. 414.
Chemicals, industrial. Use of, October-November
1951. Sept. 289.
Cotton-textile mills, use of plans, March 1952. Aug.
149.

Cutlery, hand tools, and general hardware, late 1951
and early 1952. Oct. 417.
Footwear industry, August 1951. Feb. 174.
Foundries, nonferrous, effective, August 1951. Apr.
409.

General Motors Corp. plan, sickness absenteeism
under, 1949-50. Summary analysis. Jan. 38-40.
Heating-apparatus industry, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 418.
Hosiery industry, selected areas, September 1951.
Mar. 2 93.
International Harvester Go. Collective-agreement
provisions, 1946-50. Aug. 173-174,
Iron and steel forgings industry. Use of plans, late
1951 and early 1952. July 2 7.
Iron and steel industry, basic. 1950. Feb. 162163.

Laundries, power. Pla ns effect ive in 8 of 31 areas,
June 1952. Nov. 51 9.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Provisions effective, 1949,
1950, an·d 1952. June 681 - 682.


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Machinery industries, extent of practice, autumn
1951. May 555.
Milk-dealer industry. Benefits provisioi;is, late 1951
and early 1952. Oct. 4 23.
. .
Millinery industry. Collective-agreement prov1S1ons,
March 1952. Oct. 419-420.
Mining, anthracite. Provisions effective, Sept. 1,
1930, to Oct. 1, 1952. Nov. 533.
Petroleum refineries, October-November 1951. June
663.

Pulp, paper, and paperboard mills. Extent to which
provided, April 1952. Dec. 62 9.
.
Radio, television, and related products mdustry.
Use of plans, November 1951. July 26.
Railroad car manufacturing. Provision for, January 1952. A ug. 183.
Stamped and pressed metal products industry. Extent of use of plans, late 1951 and early 1952.
Aug. 178.

Steel foundries. Extent of provision, December
1951. Aug. 181.
Textiles. Cotton. Prevalence of use of plans, March
1952. Aug. 149.
- - Synthetic. Extent of use of practice, March
1952. Sept. 284.
Wood-furniture industry. Extent of provisions,
August 1951 and July 1952. Mar. 297; Dec. 630.
Woolen and worsted mills. Extent of provision of
plans, April-May 1952. Oct. 408.
Health, occupational. U. S. Public Health Service program. Mar. 253-256.
Heating apparatus industry. Earnings in selected occupations in selected areas, 1951 and 1952. Oct. 417418.

Holiday work:
American Viscose Corp. Provisions effective, 194551. Dec. 633.
American Woolen Co. Provisions effective, Mar. 15,
1952. Nov. 523.
Longshore industry, Pacific. Provision effective,
June 18, 1951. Nov. 526.
Mining, anthracite. Changes effective, 1930-51.
Nov. 532.
Printing trades, San Francisco. Book and job
and newspaper. Collective-agreement provisions,
1939-51. Sept. 2 95.
Sinclair Oil Corp. Provisions effective, 1941-52.
Nov. 538-539.
Holidays, paid:
American Viscose Corp. Specified, union-contract
provisions, 1945-51. Dec. 633.
Anaconda Copper Mining Co. Provisions, 1941-50.
July 36-37.

Candy and other confectionery p,r oduction. Provisions in effect, late 1951 and early 1952. Oct.
414.

Chemicals, industrial. Provisions effective, October-November 1951. Sept. 288.
Coats and suits (women's) industry. Provisions
concerning time and incentive workers, Sep,t ember 1951. Apr. 411.
Cutlery, hand tools and general hardware, late 1951
and early 1952. Oct. 417.
Electroplating, plating, and polishing industry, late
1951 and early 1952. Oct. 415.
Footwear industry, August 1951. Feb. 174.
Foundries, nonferrous. Provisions effective, August
1951. A pr. 409.
Glenn L. Martin Co. Provisions effective, 1944-51.
J uly 41.

Grain-milling industry. Extent of practice, late
1951 and early 1952. July 28.
Heating-apparatus industry, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 418.

SUBJECT INDEX TO VOLUMES- 74 AND 75
Hosiery industry, full-fashioned. Provisions, Sept.
17, 1951, concerning new employees. Oct. 409.
- - Selected areas, September 1951. Mar. 293.
Insu r ance-carrier industry, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 420-421.
International Harvester Co. Collective-agreement
provisions, 1946-50. Aug. 171.
International Shoe Co. Collective-agreement provisions, 1945-51. July 32.
Iron and steel forgings industry. Practice in effect,
late 1951 and early 1952. July 26-27.
Iron and steel industry, basic, '1950. Feb. 162.
Laundries, power. Practice in effect, June 1952.
Nov. 519.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Provisions effective, 1937,
1938, and 1940. June 680.
Liquor distilleries. Practice in effect, April 1952.
Nov. 517.
Machinery industries, production workers. Practice
effective, autumn 1951. May 555.
Milk-dealer industry. Provisions effective, late 1951
and early 1952. Oct. 423.
Millwork industry, late 1951 and early 1952. Oct.
424.

North American Aviation, Inc. Provisions effective,
1941, 1946, and 1947. J une 685.
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Provisions effective,
1943-51. May 538-539.
Paint and varnish industry. Practice in effect, June
1952. Nov . 520.
Petroleum refineries, October-November 1951. June
663.

Printing, commercial, New York City. Provisions
of Oct. 1, 1951, and Jan. 1, 1952, adding Washington's Birthday. Dec. 638.
Pulp, paper, and paperboard mills, April 1952. D ec.
629.

Radio, television, and related products industry.
Provisions in effect, November 1951. July 25-26.
Railroad-car manufacturing. Provisions in effect,
January 1952. Aug. 182-183.
Sheet-metal-work industry. Extent of practice, late
1951 and early 1952. A u g. 176-177.
Shipbuilding industry, Pacific Coast. Provisions
effective, 1941-51. Mar. 303.
Shoe manufacturing, Massachusetts, 1945-51. Feb.
171.

Steel foundries. Practice in effect, December 1951.
Aug. 181.

Textiles. Cotton. Extent of practice, March 1952.
Aug. 149.

- - Synthetic. Extent to which granted, March
1952. Sept. 284.
Vacation periods, occurring within. Provisions
concerning, 64 collective agreements. Aug. 167.
Wood-furniture industry. Extent of provisions, August 1951 and July 1952. Mar. 297 ; Dec. 629.
Woolen and worsted mills. Practices, April-May
1952. Oct. 408 .
Home-building permits. N onfarm dwelling units, contractors' use, selected months, 1945-50. Jan. 21-22.
Hosiery industry. Hourly earnings, selected occupations
and areas, and related wage practices, September
1951. Mar. 2 91-293.
Hospitals and surgical insurance. North American Aviation, Inc. Provisions effective, 1941, 1946, 1948, and
1950. J une 686-687.
Hospitalization insurance or benefits:
, American Viscose Corp. Provisions made effective
June 1, 1946. Dec. 635.
American Woolen Co. Provisions made effective
Nov. 30, 1951. Nov. 524.
Candy and other confectionery products, late 1951
and early 1952. Oct. 414.


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11

Chemicals, industrial. Prevalence of use, OctoberNovember 1951. Sept. 289.
Coats and suits (women's) industry, September
1951. Apr. 411.
Cutlery, hand tools, and general hardware, late
1951 and early 1952. Oct. 417.
Footwear industry, August 1951. Feb. 174.
Glenn L. Martin Co. Provisions effective, 1944-52.
July 42.

Heating apparatus industry, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 418.
Hosiery industry, full-fashioned. Provision effective Dec. 1, 1951. Oct. 409.
- - Selected areas, September 1951. Mar. 293.
International Harvester Co. Provisions effective,
1946-52. Aug. 173.
Iron and steel forgings industry. Use of plans, late
1951 and early 1952. July 2 7.
Iron and steel industry, basic, 1950. Feb. 163.
Laundries, power. Plans effective in 9 of 31 areas,
June 1952. Nov. 519.
Liquor distilleries. Provisions in effect, April 1952.
Nov. 517.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Provisions, 1949-51. June
681.

Longshore industry, Pacific. Provisions maqe effective August 1951 and June 1952. Nov. 527.
Machinery industries. Extent of practice, autumn
1951. May 555.
Millinery industry. Collective-agreement provisions,
March 1952. Oct. 420.
North American Aviation. Provisions, 1941-51.
June 686-687.

Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Provisions, 1944-51.
May 543.

Pulp, paper, and paperboard mills. Extent to which
provided, April 1952. Dec. 629.
Radio, television, and related products. ' Use of
plans, November 1951. July 26.
Railroad c:ar manufacturing. Provision for, January 1952. Aug. 183.
Shoe manufacturing, Massachusetts, 1945-51. Feb.
172.

Sinclair Oil Co. Provisions., 1950-52. Nov. 543.
Stamped and pressed metal p,r oducts industry. Extent of use of plans, late 1951 and early 1952.
Aug. 178.

Steel foundries. Extent of provisions, December
1951. Aug. 181.
Textiles. Cotton. Extent of provision, March 1952.
Aug. 149.

- - Synthetic. Extent to which provided, March
1952. Sept. 284.
Wood-furniture industry. Extent of provisions, August 1951 and July 1952. Mar. 297; Dec. 630.
Woolen and worsted mills. Extent of use, AprilMay 1952. Oct. 408.
Hotels and lodging places. See Employment statistics,
and Wages and hours.
Hours of work, United States (see also Wages and
hours):
Baking industry. Standard workweek, July 1, 1951.
Jan. 28.

Building trades. Standard workweek, July 1, 1951.
Jan. 25.

Candy and other confectionery products industry.
Length of workweek, late 1951 and early 1952.
Oct. 414.
Cutlery, hand tools, and general hardware, late 1951
and early 1952. Oct. 417.
·
Electroplating, plating, and polishing industry, late
1951 and early 1952. Oct. 415.
Footwear industry, August 1951. Feb. 174.
Foundries, nonferrous. Weekly schedules, August
1951. Apr. 409.

12

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

Hours of work, United States-Continued
Grain-milling industry. Schedules in effect, late
1951 and early 1952. July 28.
Heating apparatus industry, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 418.
Insurance-carrier industry, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 420.
Iron and steel forgings industry. Schedule effective,
late 1951 and early 1952. July 26.
Laundries, power. Routemen and other employees,
June 1952. Nov. 519.
Lengthening of, as emergency defense measure if
necessary; alternative measures. Mar. 266.
Liquor distilleries, April 1952. Nov. 517.
Machinery industries, autumn 1951. May 554.
Metalworking industries. Schedule in effect, 1951.
Dec. 619. ·

Milk-dealer industry. Provisions effective, late 1951
and early 1952. Oct. 423.
Millwork industry, late 1951 and early 1952. Oct.

Housing and Home Finance Agency, U.S. Government.
Aid in Savannah River AEC project area, 1951. Aug.
152-154.

Immigration, United States. Displaced persons program
ending 1952. Summary of operation and results. Dec.
611-614,

Incentive methods of pay:
American Viscose Corp·. Guaranteed rates, provision effective, Nov. 30, 1945. · Dec. 634.
Anaconda Copper Mining Co., underground miners,
1951. July 85.
Candy and other confectionery products. Use of,
late 1951 and early 1952. Oct. 413.
Goats and suits (women's) industry, September
1951. Apr. 41 o.
Cutlery, hand tools, and general hardware. Extent
of use, late 1951 and early 1952. Oct. 416.
Electroplating, plating, and polishing industry.
Extent of use, late 1951 and early 1952. Oct.

424.

Motortruck drivers and helpers. Standard workweek, July 1, 1951. Feb. 169.
Paint and varnish industry. :Practices effective,
June 1952. Nov. 520.
Petroleum refineries, October-November 1951. June
663.

Printing-trades workers, July 1, 1951. Apr. 415.
Pulp, paper, and paperboard mills, April 1952.
Dec. 627.
Radio, television, and related products. Schedules
in effect, November 1951. Ju ly 25.
,
Railroad car manufacturing. Schedules in effect,
January 1952. Aug. 182.
Sheet-metal-work industry. Weekly schedules, late
1951 and early 1952. Aug. 176.
Stamped and pressed metal products industry.
Schedules effective, late 1951 and early 1952.
Aug. 178.
Steel foundries. Schedules of production workers,
December 1951. Aug. 180.
· Transit, local, operating employees. Prevailing
lengths of workweek. Mar. 2 96.
Wood-furniture industry. Length of workweek,
August 1951 and July 1952. Mar. 296-297; Dec.
629.

Hours of work, Japan. Average length of workweek of
nonagricultural employees, since 1948, by sex. Oct.
397.

Housing ( see also Constructi?n) :
.
Air Force. Labor requirements for constructmg;
man-weeks of labor for specified occupations,
selected contracts, 1951. Sept. 263-268.
Cooperative. Status in December 1951. Mar. 281283.

Enlisted personnel and commissioned and warrant
officers. Basic monthly quarters allowance, by
grade. July 80.
Metropolitan areas. Financing sales of new units.
Apr. 390-894,

Mortgage-credit controls on 1- to 4-family houses
relaxed June 11, 1952; revised down payments
required from veterans and nonveterans. July 52.
New. Structural characteristics and cost, 1-family
houses started; 8 metropolitan areas, second and
third quarters, 1950. Feb. 168-167. Correction
of statement on fire-resistant material for inner
walls. Mar. 318.
Public, in South, 7 projects. Labor requirements,
earnings, and hours; space and structural characteristics; construction costs. Oct. 388-394.
Savannah River AEG project. Reliance on private
development and financing; use of existing accommodations; trailer courts and parks; new
construction, 1951. Aug. 150-155.


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414-415.

Footwear industry. Use of, August 1951. Feb. 174.
Foundries, nonferrous. Extent to which used, Au~
gust 1951. Apr. 407-408.
Heating-apparatus industry. Extent of practice,
late 1951 and early 1952. Oct. 417.
International Shoe Co. Proportion of workers affected by, 1951. July 31.
Iron and steel industry, basic. Extent of use and
effect on earnings, January 1951. Feb. 159-160.
Iron and steel forgings industry, 1951 and 1952.
July 26.

Machinery manufacture, October-December 1951.
May 553-554.
Millinery industry. Extent of use, March 1952.
Oct. 419.
Radio and related products industry. Determination of rates, 1951. Apr. 401-402.
Sheet-metal work industry. Extent of use, late 1951
and early 1952. Aug. 176.
Stamped and pressed metal products. Extent of
use, late 1951. and early 1952. Aug. 177.
Steel foundries. Extent of use, December 1951.
Aug. 180.
Income:
Annual. Home purchasers in 10 metropolitan areas.
Apr. 893.
Family. Averages, all families (91 cities) and
wage-earner and clerical-worker families (16
cities), 1950, with spending patterns. Aug. 125188.

Workers'. Net spendable earnings (BLS series),
computation of. Mar. 806-309.
Industrial Relations Research Association, United
States. Government-labor relations discussion, 4th
annual meeting, Boston, December 1951. Feb. 145150.

Inflation:
American Assembly on Inflation-Its Causes, Consequences, and Cures-May 18-22, 1952. Conclusions. July 52-53.
Japan. 1946, 1947, and 1948, and reasons for.
Measures taken by Supreme Commander for
Allied Powers to overcome. Oct. 395.
Initiation fees, union. Provisions in 52 international
union constitutions. Oct. 376-377.
Injury pay. Anaconda Copper Mine Co., 1941-51.
38.

Injury rates. See Accident statistics.
Insurance. See specific types of.
Insurance-carrier industry. Salaries, standard weekly,
selected occupations and areas, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 420-421.
International Confederation of Free Trade Unions.

SUBJECT INDEX TO VOLUMES 74 AND 75
Relations with American Federation of Labor. Aug.

IV.

International Labor Organization:
Thirty-fifth Conference, Geneva, June 1952. Proceedings, conventions, recommendations. Sept.
279-281.
United States participation in since 1934; objectives. Apr. 424.
International labor programs. Objectives of United
States, and agencies through which promoted, summary. Apr. 422-425.
International Trade Secretariats. Participation in by
American labor unions, as of 1951. Apr. 423.
Iron and steel forgings industry. Hourly earnings, 4
areas, selected occupations, late 1951 and early 1952,
and related wage practices. July 26-27.
Iron and steel industry, basic. Hourly earnings and
related wage practices, January 1951. Feb. 158-163.
Job tenure. Length of time employees continue working
without changing to a different employer (from U. S.
Census data). Sept. 257-262.
Jury and election service. International Shoe Co., collective-agreement provision, 1945. July 33.
Jury-duty pay. Sinclair Oil Corp., provision effective,
1949-52. Nov. 541.
Jury service. International Harvester Co. Collectiveagreement provisions, 1946. Aug. 179.
Labor and industrial conditions, Canada. Employment,
wage and price levels, unions and collective bargaining, and labor legislation, 1951. May 531-533.
Labor and industrial relations ( see also Collective agreements):
Bituminous -Coal Operators' Association joined by
most Indiana and Illinois soft-coal producers formerly unwilling to join. June 698-699.
- - Public and quasi-public work, implications for
use in 1952. Mar. 257-262.
Collective bargaining. Factors in successful bargaining. Mar. 278-279.
Developments, by month, November 1951-October
1952. See Developments in Industrial Relations,
each i3sue.
Function of mediation ( discussion by president of
Industrial Relations Research Association, December 1951). Mar. 275-278.
Interunion disputes. AFL and CIO joint committee
established Jan. 21, 1952. Mar. 318.
Savannah River AEC project, as of November 1951.
July 12-21.
Union shop. Extent to which practice increased i;n
early 1952. Mar. III.
Labor attaches. Duties of. First assigned to foreign
posts in World War II. Apr. 424.
Labor banks. Condition, Dec. 31, 1950 and 1951; development, 1920-51. Apr. 425-426.
Labor force, United States:
Civilian. Total, estimated, by employment status,
hours of work, and sex; monthly, November 1950October 1952. See Current labor statistics, table
A-1, each issue.
Electronics industry, 1951. Characteristics before
and since military production began. Feb. 154.
Trucking industry, 1951-52. Jan. 30.
Labor legislation. See Legislation.
Labor-management cooperation:
Employer's duty to supply data for collective bargaining. Oct. 381-387.
Progress expected, 1952 to 1962. Panel discussion
by Industrial Relations Resef1rch Association
meeting, May 1952. Summary. July 1-6.
Labor-management disputes:
Aircraft manufacture. IAM workers and Boeing


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13

Airplane Co. Dispute certified to WSB Dec. 28,
1951. Feb. 193-194.
- - Negotiations, December 1951 through October
1952. Feb. 193-194,· Apr. 437; May 513-514, 579;
Aug. 203; Sept. 312; Oct. 435; Nov. 551-552;
Dec. 657.
- - UAW workers, Douglas Aircraft Co., and
Wright Aeronautical Corp., late 1951-March
1952. Apr. 437; May 513-514; 573.
Airlines. Northwest Airlines, Inc. Emergency
board appointed Jan. 4, 1952. Mar. 317.
- - Pan American World Airways, late 1951 to
March 1952. Feb. 194; Apr. 436; May 573.
Aluminum industry, Nov. 27, 1951-Jan. 26, 1952.
Jan. 68 ,· Feb. 198; Mar. 315; Sept. 310.
Atomic energy construction workers, December
1951 and Mar. 3, 1952. Feb. 194; May 571.
Borg-Warner Corp. and United Auto Workers.
Strike, October and November 1951. May 513.
Carpet and rug (textiles) industry, June-September 1952. Sept. 311; Oct. 436.
Clothing. Controversy between International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union and Independent
Association of Women's Apparel Manufacturers,
July and August 1952. Sept. IV; Oct. 495-436.
Construction industry. March-October 1952. June
697 ,· July 67; Aug. 202-203; Sept. 311; Oct. 436;
Dec. 658.
- - San Francisco Bay area, AFL carpenters, beginning Mar. 31, 1952, ending June 5, 1952. June
697; July 67; Aug. 202-203.
Copper and other nonferrous metals industry. Mine,
mill, and smelter workers strike, industry-wide,
August 1951; injunction Sept. 5; settlement by
November 1951. Jan. 69; May 512-513.
Electrical-products, November 1951-October 1952.
Jan. 69; Feb. 194-195; Mar. 317; Apr. 437; May
571-572,· June 698; July 67; Aug. 204; Oct. 494;
Nov. 550-551; Dec. 656-657.
Farm-equipment workers and International Harvester Co., June-October 1952. Aug. 204; Oct.
436; Nov. 552; Dec. 658.
Injunction. Against International Typographical
Union, March 1948, for insistence upon closed
shop. May 497.
- - Copper and other nonferrous metals industry,
September 1951. May 512-513.
- - Temporary, secured by Government against 3
operating railroad brotherhoods, March 1952; replaced by preliminary injunction, Apr. 15, 1952.
Mar. III; June 698.
Insurance agents. Prudential Insurance Co. employees, strike beginning Dec. 1, 1951, ended Feb.
19, 1952. Feb. 194; Mar. III; Apr. 435.
International Typographical Union. Strike, November 1947 to March 1948, against union-security changes caused by passage of Labor Management Relations Act of 1947; injunction March
1948. May 497-498.
Longshoremen's wildcat strike, fall of 1951. Factfinding board's report, January 1952. Mar. 318.
Lumber industry. Strike by International Woodworkers of America, April-June 1952. May 572579; July 67; Aug. 203.
Man-days of idleness caused by, major issues, number of workers involved, and settlements, 1951.
Feb. 195.
Maritime industry, May to September 1952. Aug.
III, IV, 204; Sept. 311-312; Oct. 434; Nov. 551.
Meat-packing industry, August 1951 to October
1952. Feb.193; Mar. 316; Apr. 436-497; July 69;
Oct. 434; Dec. 65'1•.

14

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

Labor-management disputes-Continued
Mining. Anthracite. Developments following announcement (July) of notice of termination of
contract. Sept. III; Oct. IV, 433.
- - - - Interim agreement Sept. 17, 1952; contract Oct. 31, allowing $1.90 a day increase negotiated, averting strike. Nov. IV, 550; Dec. 656.
- - Anthracite and bituminous coal. "Memorial
holiday" 5-day stoppage, starting Aug. 23, 1952.
Oct. 433.
- - Bituminous coal. Controversy concerning
Wage Stabilization Board's decision not to approve full $1.90 a day increase. No'V. IV, 550;
Dec. IV, 656.
- - - - Operators given notice, July 22, of contract termination in September. Agreement
reached in October; and referral to Wage Stabilization Board. Sept. 312; Oct. III-IV, 433.
- - - - Strike Oct. 20-27 following disallowance
by Wage Stabilization Board of 40 cents of $1.90
daily wage agreed upon by union and operators.
Dec. 656.
National emergency strike provisions of LMRA,
1947. Request by Congress, in Defense Production Act Amendments of [June 30] 1952, for
President to use in steel strike. June III; Aug.
192, 201-202.

- - Use of, in 1950 and 1951. Ma,y 514-515.
Nonferrous metals. Strike, Augus.t -September 1951.
Jan. 69; May 512-513.
Petroleum industry. Strike postponed in March and
begun Apr. 30, 1952, settled [May] on WSB
terms. Mar. III; Apr. 435; May IV, 571; June
III, 697; July 66-67.
Railroad industry. Continued from 1950 and 1951
to October 1952. Jan. 68-69; Feb. III, 135-136,
194; Mar. III, 316-317; Apr. III-IV, 436; May
514-515, 570-571; June III, 698; July 66, 67-68;
Sept. IV, 312; Oct. 434-435; Dec. 657.
- - Summary of 3-year wage-rules dispute ending May 1952. July 67-68.
- - Union-security issue, 1952. Apr. IV, 435,436;
June 698; July 68; Sept. IV, 312; Oct. 434-435;
Dec. 657.
Rubber industry. February to October 1952. May
571; June 697; Sept. III-IV, 312; Oct. 433; Dec.
657.

- - Goodrich Co. August 1952 strike; settlement provisions. Oct. 433.
Shipbuilding industry, late 1951 to August 1952.
Feb. 195; Mar. 815; Apr. 435; May 571; June
697; Aug. 203; Oct. 435.
Smelting and refining. Strike called July 2, 1951,
by United Steelworkers (CIO); dispute certified
to WSB July 26, agreement in October 1951.
May 512.
Steel industry. Nov. 27, 1951 to October 1952.
Jan. III, 68; Feb. III, 193; Mar. III, 315; Apr.
III, 435; May III, 570; June III, 696; July
Ill, 66; Aug. III, 192, 201, 202; Sept. 309-310;
Dec. 657.
- - Work stoppage, clause regarding, Public Law
429, 82d Cong. (Defense Production Act Amendments of 1952) approved June 30, 1952. Aug.
192.

Telegraph industry, April-August 1952. May IV,
572; June III-IV, 697; July 67; Oct. 435.
Telephone industry, March to August 1952. Apr.
437; May IV, 572; June 697; Sept. 311; Oct. 435.
Textiles, November 1951-September 1952. Jan. 69;
Feb. IV, 195; Mar. 315-316; Apr. 435-436; May
572; July 68; Aug. 203; Sept. 311; Oct. 436.
Truck drivers, southern and midwestern. Strike of


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Feb. 1 ended a week later when settlement agreed
upon. Apr. 435.
Wage Stabilization Board. Cases certified to, 1951,
summary. May 511-514.
Work stoppages resulting from. Number of workers involved and man-days idle, 1935-39 average, annual averages, 1945-50, monthly October
1950-October 1952. See Current labor statistics,
table E-1, each issue.
- - Provisions in collective agreements, summary;
effect of Taft-Hartley law upon. Mar. 272-275.
- - Year 1951. Monthly trend, major issues, industries affected, States and unions involved.
May 511-519.
Labor Management Relations Act ( see also Legislation). Effect on collective-agreement provisions concerning work stoppages. Mar. 274-275.
Labor-management relations. See Labor and industrial
relations.
Labor organizations, United States:
Aid given by to workers abroad in preventing Communist domination of unions. Apr. 423.
American Federation of Labor. Convention (71st),
New York, September 1952. Summary of proceedings and discussions. Nov. 499-501.
- - Green, William, president. Death on Nov. 21,
1952; connection with labor movement. Dec. III.
- - New leadership [beginning Nov. 25, 1952].
Dec. III.
Assessments, union. Objectives and methods. Oct.
380.

CARE packages. Use of, with medical and other
supplies, to help workers abroad. Apr. 423.
Clothing Workers, Amalgamated ( CIO). Contract
proposals formulated for presentation to Clothing Manufacturers Association. Nov. 552.
Congress of Industrial Organizations. Murray,
Philip. Death on Nov. 9, 1952; connection with
labor movement. Nov. III-IV.
- - Training program for active and effective
leadership, 1951. Program content; student body;
type of training; and gains from training. Feb.
140-144.

Financing of union activities. Sources of income
and methods employed. Oct. 373-380.
Hosiery Workers, American Federation of (AFL).
Annual convention, 1952; summary of proceedings. June 648-652.
Initiation fees and dues required of members.
Methods of establishing ( chart included). Oct.
376-378.

Interunion disputes. AFL and CIO joint committee
established Jan. 21, 1952. Mar. 318.
Interunion relations. Appraisal of. July IV.
- - Savannah River AEC project, November 1951.
July 19-20.
Machinists, International Association of ( AFL).
Convention, September 1952; discussions, proceedings, action taken concerning union finances.
Dec. 639-641.
- - Training for active participation in local
lodges. Planning, objectives, and procedures.
June 653-657.
Mine Workers of America, United. Convention,
October 1952; discussions and proceedings. Dec.
641-643.

- - Welfare fund. Report on, at union's October
1952 convention. Dec. 643.
Oil Workers' International Union (CIO). Policies,
long-range, endorsed at 22d annual convention,
September 1952. Nov. 552.
Paper Makers Union (AFL) and Pulp, Sulphite,
and Paper Workers (AFL). Workers' education
programs, experience, 1948-52. Apr. 395-399.

SUBJECT INDEX TO VOLUMES 74 AND 75
Political attitudes. Suggestions by AFL and CIO
to platform makers in 1952 campaign. July IV.
Services to members by federations, internationals,
and locals (chart). Oct. 375.
Steelworkers, United (CIO). May 1952 convention,
proceedings summarized. July 22-24.
"Taxes"-per capita contributions for support of
international unions; amounts specified in 90 international constitutions (chart). Oct. 379.
Textile Workers Union of America (CIO). Annual convention, 1952, summary of proceedings.
June 648-652.
Training program of two paper workers' union for
offic€rs, stewards, and grievance committeemen,
experience 1948-52. Apr. 395-399.
Typographical Union, International (AFL). Century of activity: internal structure; benefits;
technological change; bargaining; procedure in
disputes. May 493-498.
Union-convention schedules, July-October 1952.
June 657; July 56; Aug. 183; Sept. 308.
Union news, brief summaries. See Labor Month in
Review, each issue.
Labor organizations, foreign countries:
Canada. Union growth and collective bargaining,
1951; anti-Communist attitudes. May 531-533.
Japan. Pressure for higher wages in postwar period
and employers' methods of meeting. Oct. 395.
State domination of. Soviet Union, Spain, and
Portugal. Aug. 139.
Union-security safeguards. Canada, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Switzerland, Austria, West Germany, Great Britain, New Zealand, Australia,
Greece, compared with collective-agreement provisions in United States. Aug. 134-139.
Labor organizations, international:
International Confederation of Free Trade Unions.
AFL relations with, in January 1952. Feb. IV.
- - Conferences and relations with American labor, 1951. Feb. 139.
- - Establishment December 1949; second congress July 1951; participation by American labor
organizations. Apr. 423.
- - Executive board meeting, New York, proceedings summarized. Dec. IV.
Labor standards, United States:
Advocated by 18th National Conference on Labor
Legislation, Washington, D. G., December 1951.
Summary. Jan. 12-15.
State. Federal policy on retaining, recommended
by Secretary of Labor Tobin. Jan. 16.
Labor supply. Areas (23) where surplus existed Feb.
18, 1952. Measures to place defense orders in. Apr.
426-427.
Labor turnover:
Chemicals, industrial, organic. Quarterly rates
1950-52. May 527.
Communication (telephone and telegraph). Monthly
rates per 100 employees, by cause of turnover,
September 1951-August 1952. S ee Current labor
statistics, table B-2, each issue.
Electronics industry, 1951. Feb. 155.
Manufact ring. Monthly rates per 100 employees,
by cause of turnover. Years 1939, 1946-51. See
Current labor statistics, table B-1, each issue.
- - Selected groups and industries, Septembe·r
1951-September 1952. See Current labor statistics, table B-2, each issue.
Mining, metal and coal. Monthly rates per 100
employees, by cause of turnover. September 1951
to September 1952. See Current labor statistics,
table B-2, each issue.
Ship construction and repairing, by month, May
1950 to February 1952. July 11.


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15

Labor, U. S. Department of. Durkin, Martin P. designated Secretary of Labor [Dec. 1, 1952]; resume -of
union experience. Dec. Ill-IV.
Labor Policy Committee, United. Purpose, membership,
platform, and activities during life of Committee,
December 1950-August 1951. Feb. 132-133.
Laundries. See Employment statistics; and Wages and
hours.
Legislation, labor. Federal, State, and general; 18th
National Conference on, December 1951; standards
advocated and resolutions adopted. Jan. 12-15.
Legislation, United States, Federal and general:
Child labor. Agricultural work by children during
school hours, State legal restrictions on ( tabular
statement). July 45.
Coal-mine Inspection and Investigations Act of
1941. Amendment approved July 16, 1952, for
prevention of major disasters. Nov. 505-507.
Defense Production Act. See Defense Production
Act Amendments of 1952.
Federal employees. Annual and Sick Leave Act of
1951, provisions as to amount of leave and permissible accumulation. Apr. 416-417.
- - Classification Act of 1949, and amendment of
October 1951, salary changes under. Apr. 416417.
- - Compensation Act. Safety activities under
transferred to U. S. Bureau of Labor Standards,
1950. Mar. 252.
- - General Appropriation Act, 1951 (passed
Sept. 6, 1950) and Independent Offices Appropriation Act, 1952 (passed Aug. 31, 1951). Provisions
affecting permissible accumulation of annual
leave. Apr. 416-417.
Federal statutes affecting workers, enacted in 1952,
summary. Dec. 655.
Housing and Rent Act of 1947. Changes made by
Defense Production Act Amendments. of 1952.
Aug.192.
Labor Management Relations Act, Railway Labor
Act, and R a ilroad Retirement Act amended, 1951.
Feb. 137-138.
Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act. Safety activities under transferred to
U.S. Bureau of Labor Standards. Mar. 252.
Military pay and allowances. Amendments, May 19,
1952 (Public Law 346), increasing, summary.
July 28-30.
Public contracts (Walsh Healey) Act. Proceedings
made subject to requirements of Administrative
Procedure Act; wage determinations and interpretations by Secretary of Labor made subject
to judicial review. Aug. 192.
Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act. Amendment May 15, 1952, liberalizing benefits and increasing requirement for minimum base year
earnings as qualification. Dec. 655.
Social Security Act Amendments of 1952. Provisions concerning old-age and survivors insurance benefit increase, permissible earnings by recipient of benefit, wage credits for certain military service, elimination of consideration of aid
to blind in determining need of other p€rsons for
assistance, summary. Dec. 655.
State. 1952 legislation, summary. Nov. 502-505.
- - Minimum age for work in agriculture, regulations concerning. July 45.
State and Territorial. Amendments to unemployment compensation, workmen's compensation, industrial health and safety, and child labor laws,
1951. Feb. 138.
Unemployment insurance. State laws, provisions
in effect, Sept. 1, 1952 (51 jurisdictions). Dec.
623-625.

16

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

Legislation, United States, by State:
Alabama. Unemployment insurance, p.rov1s1ons in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
Alaska. Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 18~
Arizona. Discrimination in employment because of
military service prohibited, 1952. Nov. 504.
- - Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect,
Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 18.
Arkansas. Unemployment insurance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 18.
California. Unemployment insurance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-20.
Colorado. Fair employment practice, 1951. Feb.
138.

- - Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect,
Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-19.
Connecticut. Minimum wage, 1951. Feb. 138.
- - Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect,
Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
Delaware. Unemployment insurance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
District of Columbia. Child-labor law amended,
1952, reducing minimum age from 14 to 7 for
theatrical performers and changing conditions of
work. Nov. 502-505.
- - Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect,
Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623- 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 18.
Florida. Unemployment insu;rance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18,
20.

Georgia. Garnishment of wages, protection extended to sharecroppers, 1952. Nov. 503.
- - Reemployment rights for persons on military
leave provided, 1952. Nov. 504.
- - Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, coverage as of Jan.
1, 1952. Jan. 18.
.
- - - - Extended, 1952, to include employees of
rural telephone cooperatives. Nov. 502.
Hawaii. Unemployment insurance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
Idaho. Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
Illinois. Unemployment compensation. Labor and
manageme;nt agreement on legislative terms prior
to formal enactment. May 505-507.
- - - - Provisions in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec.
623-625.

- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18,
20.

Indiana. Unemployment insurance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
Iowa: Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-19.
Kansas. Unemployment insurance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18,
20.


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Kentucky. Child-labor amendment 1952, to permit
certain employment from 14 to 16 years of age
during school hours if other hours for schooling
arranged by school authorities. Nov. 503.
- - Labor organizations. National or international
organization, by 1952 statute, must have one or
more chartered locals in State, if 100 or more
good-standing members live or work in State.
,

Nov. 504.

- - School term minimum extended from 7 to 9
months, 1952, but approval of shorter term permitted to avoid reducing teacher's salaries. Nov.
503.

- - Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect,
Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation. Benefits increased
and coverage extended to include State Tuberculosis Sanitoria Commission workers and (by
civil-defense act provision) civil defense personnel, 1952. Nov. 502.
- - - - Occupational-disease coverage, as of Jan.
1, 1952. Jan. 18.
Louis,i ana. Unemployment insurance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation. Medical benefits,
maximum amount raised; 6 occupational diseases
made compensable, 1952. Nov. 503.
Maine. Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
Maryland. Unemployment insurance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
Massachusetts. Defense emergency labor standards
relaxation; extension, 1952, until July 1, 1963.
Nov. 504-505.

- - Minimum-wage law amended, 1952, providing
for higher rates and requiring mandatory orders
only to be issued. Nov. 503.
- - Safety law. Amendment, 1952, applying rules
to self-employed and individual contractors who
themselves work at trade, as well as to employees.
Nov. 504.

- - Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect,
Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Wage payment and wage collection law
amended, 1952, to prohibit requirement of kickbacks from wages or tips of employees serving
food or beverages. Nov. 503.
- - Workmen's compensation. Benefit increase
and occupational coverage, 1961. Jan. 17-18.
- - - - State civil-defense act, coverage, 1952.
Nov. 502.

Michigan. Unemployment insurance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation. , Occupational-disease coverage, and administrative changes, 1951.
Jan. 18, 20.

- - - - Provisions changed, 1952, to increase
burial allowances and weekly rates for death and
for partial and total disability. Nov. 502.
Minnesota. Unemployment insurance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-62!it
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
Mississippi. Unemploym~nt insurance, provisions
in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, civil-defense personnel covered by State civil-defense act, 1952.
Nov. 502.

Missouri. Unemployment insurance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-20.
Montana. Unemployment insurance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.

SUBJECT INDEX TO VOLUMES 74 AND 76
Workmen's compensation, 1951: Jan. 17-19.
Nebraska. Unemployment insura:n,ce, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18,
20.

Nevada. Unemployment insurance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Union-security agreements outlawed. Feb.
139.

- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 18-19.
New Hampshire. Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
New Jersey. Equal-pay law, prohibiting discrimi' nation in rate or method of payment because of
sex. Nov. 503.
- - Medical-examination requirement as, condition
of employment prohibited, 1952. Nov. 504.
- - Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect,
Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
New Mexico. Unemployment immrance, provisions
in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
New York. Arbitration law amended, 1952, to
make written agreements to arbitrate valid and
enforceable. Nov. 504.
- - Child labor. Minimum age for licensed practical nurse reduced, 1952, from 20 to 19 years.
Nov. 503.
- - Defense emergency labor standards relaxation; extension, 1952, until July 1, 1953. Nov.
504-505.

- - Fair employment practice act amended, 1952,
to prohibit discrimination in public places. Nov.
504.

- - Migrant workers' children, care of, law made
permanent, 1952. Nov. 504.
- - Garnishment of wages, amount exempt raised
in cases brought before courts not of record.
Nov. 503.
- - Reemployment rights for persons on military
leave provided, 1952. Nov. 504.
- - Safety belts or nets for trapeze or tight-rope
acts made mandatory. Nov. 504.
- - Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect,
Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 18.
North Carolina. Unemployment insurance, p,r ovisions in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
North Dakota. Unemployment insurance, provisions
in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation; 1951. Jan. 17-20.
Ohio. Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect,
Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-20.
Oklahoma. Unemployment insurance, pr ovisions, in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18,
20.

Oregon. Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
Pennsylvania. Child labor, employment of minors
under 18 for delivery of wine or liquor prohibited
by 1952 amendment to penal laws. Nov. 503.
- - Safety. Public Safety Commission set up,
1952, for investigation activities. Nov. 504.
- - Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect,
Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation. Coverage broadened, 1961. Jan. 18.


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17

- - - - Weekly rates and aggregate benefits increased, 1952. Nov. 502.
·
Puerto Rico. Workmen's compensation. Medical
benefits increased and extended to employers in
regular manual labor on own farms or in own
business; occupational-disease coverage broadened, 1952. Nov. 502-503.
- - - - Occupational-disease coverage and administrative changes, 1951. Jan. 18-20.
Rhode Island. Fair employment practice act
amended, 1952, to prohibit discrimination in public places. Nov. 504.
- - Unemployment insurance, provisions effective,
Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation. Benefit increases,
occupational-disease coverage, and interim committee to study laws, 1951. Jan. 17-18, 20.
- - - - Burial allowance increased. Civil-defense personnel coverage authorized, 1952. Nov.
1

502-503.

South Carolina. Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
South Dakota. Unemployment insurance, provisions
in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 18-19.
Tennessee. Unemployment insurance, provisions
in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 18.
Texas. Antitrust law amended, 1951. Feb. 188139.

- - Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 18.
Utah. Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-20.
Vermont. Unemployment insurance, provisions in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 18; Feb.
138.

Virginia. Garnishment of wages, amount of wages
exempt raised for householder or head of family,
1952. Nov. 503.
- - Industrial relations. Seizure of public utilities,
1947 act repealed, 1952, and replaced by new act.
Nov. 504,
- - Picketing, illegal, law amended with respect to
nonemployees' picketing. Nov. 504.
- - Medical examination requirement as condition
· of employment prohibited, 1952. Nov. 504.
- - Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect,
Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation. Burial allowances,
aggregate benefits, and weekly rates increased,
medical-benefits provision liberalized, occupational-disease provision amended to compulsory
full coverage, 1952. Nov. 503.
- - - - Occupational-disease coverage as of Jan.
1, 1952. Jan. 18.
Washington. Unemployment insurance, provisions
in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18,
20.

West Virginia. Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's eompensation, 1951. Jan. 18.
Wisconsin. Child labor. Pin-setting in bowling al- ,
leys; revision, 1952, of industrial commission order, making 16 years minimum age at all times.
Nov. 503-504.
- - Unemployment insurance, provisions in effect,
•
Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-20.

18

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

Legislation, United States, by State-Continued
Wyoming. Unemployment insurance, provisions. in
effect, Sept. 1, 1952. Dec. 623, 625.
- - Workmen's compensation, 1951. Jan. 17-18.
Life insurance:
American Viscose Corp. Provisions effective, June
1, 1946. Dec. 635.
Candy and other confectionery products, late 1951
and early 1952. Oct. 414,
Chemicals, industrial. Use of plans, October-November 1951. S ept. 289.
Coats and suits (women's) industry. Death-benefit
provision, September 1951. A pr. 411.
Cotton-textile mills. Prevalence of use of plans,
March 1952. Aug. 149,
Cutlery, hand tools, and gener al hardware, late 1951
and early 1952. Oct. 417.
Footwear industry, August 1951. Feb. 174.
Foundries, nonferrous. Plans effective, August
1951. Apr. 409.
Glenn L. Mar tin Co. Provisions effective, 1942-51.
July 42.
Heating-apparatus industry, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 418.
Hosiery industry, selected areas, September 1951.
Mar. 293.
'
Insurance carrier industry, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 421.
International Harvester Co. Collective-agreement
provisions, 1946-50. Aug. 174.
International Shoe Co. P r ovision established by
company in June 1934; and agreement of 1945.
July 33.
Iron and steel forgings industry. Provisions, late
1951 and early 1952. July 27.
Iron and steel industry, basic, 1950. Feb. 163.
Liquor distilleries. Death-benefits provision effective, April 1952. Nov. 517.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Provisions effective, 1949
and 1952. Jun e 681-682.
Longshoring, North Atlantic. P r ovisions effective
for pensioners, Jan. 1, 1952. Oct. 412.
Machinery industries. Extent of practice, autumn
1951. May 555.
Milk-dealer industry. Benefit provisions in effect,
late 1951 and early 1952. Oct. 423.
Millinery industry. Provisions for, in health funds
established under collective agr eements, March
1952. Oct. 419-420.
North American Aviation, Inc. Provision effective,
1941-51. June 686.
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Provisions effective,
1944-51. May 543,
Paint and varnish industry. Practices in effect,
June 1952. Nov. 520.
Petroleum refineries, October-November 1951.
June 663.
Pulp, paper, and paperboa rd mills. Extent to which
provided, April 1952. Dec. 629.
Radio, television, and related products industry.
Extent of provision for workers, November 1951.
July 26.
Railroad-car manufacturing. Provisions, January
1952. Aug. 183.
Shoe manufacturing, Massachusetts, 1945-51. F eb.
172.
Sinclair Oil Corp. Provisions effective, 1941-52.
Nov. 543.
Stamped and pressed metal products industry. Extent of use of plans, late 1951 and early 1952.
Aug. 178.
Steel foundries. Extent of provision, December
1951. Aug. 181..


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Textiles ( cotton) industry. Prevalence of plans,
March 1952. Aug. 149.
Textiles (synthetic) indust ry. Extent of use of
pra ct ice, Mar ch 1952. Sept. 284.
Wood-fur nitur e industry. Extent of u se of plans,
Aug ust 1951 and July 1952. M ar . 297; Dec. 630 .
Woolen and worsted mills. P la ns a pplicable, AprilMay 1952. Oc·t . 407.
Liquor distilleries. Hour ly ea rnings, selected regions
and production occupations, and related wage practices, April 1952. No v . 515-517.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Wag e chronology, 1937-51.
June 677-682.
Lockout benefits. Int er national Typographical Union
(AFL), fiscal yea r ended May 20, 1951. May 495.
Longshor e industry, Pacific. Wage chronology, supplement No. 2. Gener al wage changes and related wage
practices, June 18, 1951, to June 16, 1952. Nov. 525527.
Lunch period, paid:
American Viscose Corp. Provision effective, Nov.
30, 1945. D ec. 634.
International Harvester Co. Collective-agreement
pr ovisions, 1946. Aug. 172.
Printing tra des. Book and job, and newspaper,
San Francisco. Collective-agreement provisions,
1939-47. S ept . 297.
Shipbuilding, Pacific Coast. Provisions effective,
1941-51. Mar . 305.
Machine-repair allowance. Inter national Shoe Co., collective-agreement p r ovision, 1945. July 33.
Machinery manufactur e, U.S. Hourly earnings, indexes
and percent cha nges, selected cities and occupations,
January 1945-Janu ary 1951. Jan. 48-49.
Managemen t policies. Manpower utilization in defense
per iod, responsibility and opportunity. May 560-561.
Manpower , U. S.:
Def ense. Construction program, effects of. Mar.
267-270.
- - Orders to be placed in areas with surplus labor supply, under Manpower Policy No. 4 of
Office of . Defens e Mobilization, effective Feb. 7,
1952. Apr . 426-427.
- - Policies, 1951, obje·c tives summarized, 4th
quarter ly report of Director of Defense Mobilization, J a nua ry 1952. F eb. 177.
- - P r oblems. Management responsibility, cooperat iveness, and oppor tunity. May 560-561.
Defense program . Appr aisal of situation, autumn
1952. Nov. 521.
- - Needs and sources of supply noted, by Direct or of Defense Mobilization. May 534,
Electronics indust r y. Defense requirements, 1951.
F eb. 154- 155.
Metal mining industry. Factors making labor shortage probable. Apr. 381-385.
Mobilization. Developments, 1951. Feb. 134.
Or dnance manufacturing. Skilled occupations in
which shortages occur. Probable employment
trends to end of 1952 and in 1953. Aug. 162.
Trucking industry. Problems, 1951-52. Jan. 29-30.
Sources of supply. Areas with su rplus labor, measur es to place defense or ders in, 1952. Apr. 426427.
- - Defense a nd ot her needs, 1952 and 1953, forecast. Mar . 263- 266.
Utilization of. U n ited Sta t es E m ployment Servi :e
obj ectives a nd methods. May 499-504.
Manufacturing. S ee under Accident statistics; Employment statist ics ; Labor turnover ; an d Wages a ,1d
hours.
Maternity benefits :
Hosiery indust r y, full-fashioned. Provision effective, early 1952. Oct. 409.

SUBJECT INDEX TO VOLUMES 74 AND 75
International Harvester Co. · Provisions effective,
1946-52. Aug. 173-174.
Longshore industry, North Atlantic. Provisions,
Jan. 1, 1952. Oct. 412.
North American Aviation. Provisions, 1941-51.
June 686-687.
Sinclair Oil Co. Provisions effective, 1950. Nov.
543,
Meals and mealtime pay:
Longshore industry, Pacific. Provision effective,
June 18, 1951. Nov. 527.
- - Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays. Longshoring-, North Atlantic. Premium pay provision effective, Oct. 1, 1951. Oct. 411.
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Provisions, 1943-51.
May 541,
Sinclair Oil Corp. Provisions. effective, 1941-52.
1
Nov. 540.
Mediation:
Federal Mediation and Conciliation S,e rvice. David
L. Cole appointed mediator, effective Oct. 1, 1952,
replacing Cyrus S. Ching. Oct. Ill.
Function of, in labor relations. Mar. 275-278.
Medical care. Cooperative plans, status, 1951. Mar.
283.
Medical expense:
Hosiery industry, full-fashioned. Provision effective, Dec. 1, 1951. Oct. 409.
International Harvester Co. Provisions effective,
July 1, 1950. Aug. 173.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp., 1949-51. June 681.
North American Aviation, Inc. Provisions effective,
1951. June 687.
P acific Gas and Electric Co. Provisions effective,
1944-51. May 543.
Sinclair Oil Co. Provisions effective, 1950-52. Nov.
543,
Medical service. Coats and suits (women's) industry.
At union health centers, in effect September 1951.
Apr. 411.
Metal business equipment. Hourly earnings, by regions and for United States. July 1951. Apr. 415416.
Metal mining. See under Mining.
.Mining:
Accident pay. Anaconda Copper Mining Co., 1941.
July 38.
Anthracite. Chronology of wage changes, 1930-51;
inside, outside, and contract workers; and related wage practices; daily, weekly, and · hourly
earnings, selected occupations. Nov. 528-534.
Bituminous-coal. Disaster at Orient No. 2, West
Frankfort, Ill., December 1951. Jan. IV.
Coal. Prevention of major disasters. Amendment
to 1941 Federal Coal Mine Inspection and Investigations Act. Nov. 505-507.
Copper. Anaconda Copper Mining Co. Chronology
of wage changes, 1941-51, and related practices.
July 34-38.
Employment. See under Employment statistics.
Labor turnover. Se e under Labor turnover.
. Metal. Manpower outlook, problems arising from
,
heavy demands for production. Apr. 381-385.
' Safety hearings, February 1952, on mine safety
bill. Feb. Ill-IV.
UMW A Welfare and Retirement Fund. See Wel'), fare funds-Mining.
Wages and hours. See Wages and hours.
, Work injuries. S ee Accident statistics-Mining and
1
quarrying.
Mrntary pay and allowances. Increases in, under law
of May 19, 1952. July 28-30.
Milk-dealer industry. Earnings, weekly, selected oc-


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

19

cupations and areas, late 1951 and early 1952. Oct.
422-423.
Millinery industry. Earnings, March 1952, in selected
occupations and areas. Oct. 419-420.
Millwork industry. Earnings, hourly, selected occupations and areas, late 1951 and early 1952. Oct. 424.
Minimum wage. International Shoe Co. Guaranteed
minimum ea rnings for workers learning higher-rated
jobs, 1945 agreements. July 32.
Mobility of workers. Tool and die makers. Work histories of 1,712 workers analyzed as to movements,
1940-51, between employers, industries, and regions.
Dec. 605-610.
Mobilization. Se e Manpower; Defense; Wage stabilization; and Wage Stabilization Board.
Models, New York City. Use of children of various
ages. Findings of State department of labor concerning working conditions. July 47-48.
Mortuary benefits. International Typographical Union
payments, fiscal year ended May 20, 1951. May 495.
Motion pictures, production and distribution.' See under
Employment statistics; and Wages. and hours.
Motor-vehicle industry. See Automobile industry.
"Mountain Areas." Southern Appalachian and Ozark
farmers. National Planning Association appraisal of
low-income conditions with proposed remedies. July
49.
Moving expenses:
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Practice made eff ective, May 26, 1944. May 541.
Sinclair Oil Gorp·. Provisions effective, 1945-52.
Nov. 542.
National defense. See Defense.
National Labor Relations Board:
Decisions. Activities by employers which discouraged union membership ruled violation of Labor
Management Relations Act. June 691-692.
- - Agreement between employer and union to
extend certain contract terms to another plant
which had not chosen bargaining representative
held violation of LMRA. Nov. 546.
- - Closed-shop provision continued in 1949 extension of 1947 agreement held violation, by
union and employer, of LMRA. Dec. 650-651.
- - Company's speech on its property 1 day before representation election, while denying similar right to union, held violation. Nov. 546.
- - Concerted activity unknown to employer nevertheless protected. Feb. 189.
- - Decertification election denied. Feb. 190.
- - Department-store banning of union solicitation permissible only as to selling and contiguous
areas. Apr. 430-431.
- - Discharge by employer for nonpayment of
union dues not permissible for less than 3 months'
delinquency. Mar. 311-31 2.
- - Discharge of 5 employees for approaching
superintendent to present grievance, and for
striking when they believed protest against
grievances was disregarded, held violation of
LMRA. Dec. 650.
- - Discrimination by employer in company's
Quarter Century Club a violation of the LMRA.
Jan. 63-64.
- - Dismissal of all petitions for decertification
and representation filed within a year of original
certification (October 1952). Dec. 649-650.
- - Employer did not violate LMRA by nonrecognition of union which did not sufficiently press
claim. Oct. 429.
- - Employer ordered by Board to furnish union
with data on wages and changes in productivity.
Sept. 305.

20

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

National- Labor Relations Board-Continued
Office of Price Stabilization. Restrictions upon by D
- - Employer's calling employees to meeting at
fense Production Act of 1952 (June 30, 1952). Ju
which he served refreshments and liquor and
III; Aug. 191-192. See also Price controls.
Old-age and survivors insurance. Iron and steel ind
stated his opposition to union, ruled interference.
try, basic, 1950. Feb. 163.
Sept. 305.
Older workers :
- - Employer's discharges governed, in whole or
in part, by antiunion motivations violation of
National Conference on Retirement of, January
1952 (Harriman, N. Y.). Discussions reviewed.
LMRA. Jan. 64.
- - Employer's permitting supervisor to take
June 670-672.
Retired persons. Possibilities of recalling to aid in
notes on a street union rally constituted unlawmeeting defense manpower requirements-. Mar. '
ful interference. Oct. 430.
266.
- - Grace period (30 days) for joining union must
Ordnance manufacturing. Employment in; expansion,
be from date of contract execution. May 565.
1950-52. Aug. 159-162.
- .Leading decisions, 1951. Feb. 137.
Overtime pay:
- - Legality of unilateral wage increase granted.
Jan. 63.
American Viscose Corp. Provisions effective, 1945- - Parent union's certification revoked because
51. Dec. 632.
non-Communist affidavits not filed for all officers
Anaconda Copper Mining Co. Provisions effective,
of local union. May 565. ·
1941. July 36.
- - Radio directors exercising independent judgGlenn L. Martin Co. Provisions effective, 1944 and
ment in directing and coordinating participants
1946. July 40.
in broadcasts held supervisors. Oct. 430.
International Harvester Co. Collective-agreement
- - Refusal to bargain over Christmas bonus illeprovision, 1946. Aug. 171.
gal. Feb. 189-190.
International Shoe Co., 1945-51. Collective-agree- - Refusal to hire strike participants unlawful.
ment provisions, 1945. July 32.
Jani. 64.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Provisions effective, 1937
__ , Reinstatement of unfair-labor-practice strikand 1940. June 680.
ers according to seniority. Apr. 430.
Longshore industry, Pacific. Provisions effective,,
- - Representation election. Employer officials'
June 18, 1951, and June 16, 1952. Nov. 526.
presence constituted interference. May 565.
Mining, coal. Anthracite. Changes in p,rovis.ions
- - Secondary boycott not objective of glaziers'
effective, 1930-51. Nov. 531.
union bylaw making certain restrictions against
North American Aviation, Inc. Provision effective,
work by members. Sept. 304-305.
1941. June 685.
- - Unfair-labor-practice strike by minority without union authorization held concerted activity .
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Chronology of proprotected under LMRA. Apr. 430.
visions, 1943-51. May 538.
- - Union maintains election majority status for
Printing trades, San Francisco. Book and job, and
1 year even though majority did not continue to
newspaper; collective-agreement provisions, 1939exist until certification. Oct. 429.
47. Sept. 293.
- - Union-shop agreement, length of period beShipbuilding industry, Pacific Coast. Provisions
fore employees can be required to join union.
effective,, 1941-51. Mar. 303.
Mar. 311-312.
Shoe manufacturing, Massachusetts, 1945-51. Feb.
- - Union's charge to former members of rein171.
statement fee higher than the initiation fee
Sinclair Oil Gorp. Provisions effective, 1941-49.
charged new members held not per se violation
Nov. 537-538.
of act. Sept. 805.
·
- - Union's right to reply to employer's speech.
Paint and varnish industry. Earnings, hourly, selected
Mar. 312.
plant occupations, 12 areas,, June 1952. Nov. 519
Newspaper selling and delivering, New York State.
521.
Prohibited for boys under 12 and girls under 18.
· Paper workers' unions. Training program for officers
Regulations for emp.Joyment of older boys and constewards, and committeemen. Experience, 1948-52
ditions of work. July 46.
Apr. 395-399.
Night work, premium pay. Printing, New York City,
Part-time jobs. Women, selected group of trade an
commercial and newspaper. Provisions effective Oct.
other nonmanufacturing industries, 10 cities, 1951
1 and Nov. 1, 1951, and Jan. 1, 1952. Dec. 638.
Jan. 40-41,
Nonmanufacturing industries:
Payrolls:
Part-time jobs for women, selected industries, 10
cities, 1951. Jan. 40-41,
Government. Federal civilian workers. Continen
Work injuries. See Accident statistics-Manufactal United States and outside, by branch an
turing and nonmanufacturing.
agency group. Annual averages, 1949-51; month
ly, November 1950-July 1952. See Current labo
statistics, table A-5, each issue Jan. to Oct. Dis
Obstetrical fees. Glenn L. Martin Corp. (aircraft). Procontinued after Oct. issue.
vision effective, March 1950. July 42,
- - - - Washington, D. C., and District of C
Occupational-injury time loss, pay for. American Vislumbia government, by branch and agency group
cose Corp. Provisions effective, Nov. 30, 1945. Dec.
Annual averages, 1949-51; monthly11 Novembe
634,
1950-July 1952. See Current labor statistics
Occupations:
table A-6, each issue, Jani. to Oct. Discontinu
Chemicals, industrial. Organic and inorganic
after Oct. issue.
branches. May 525-526, 530.
Guides to, information concerning, as developed by
Manufacturing industries. Indexes (1947-49
U. S. Employment Service. May 500-502.
100) of production-worker weekly payrolls an
Ordnance manufacture. Skilled labor, description
employment. Annual averages, 1939-51; month
of, in 14 occupational classifications. · Aug. 161ly, November 1950-September 1952. See Curren
162.
labor statistics, table A-4, each issue.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

21

SUBJECT INDEX TO VOLUMES 74 AND 75
Pensions:
Foundries, nonferrous. Provisions effective, August
1951. Apr. 409.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Provisions effective, 1942,
1947, and 1949. June 682.
Old-age. provided to members by International
Typographical Union. May 495.
Performers, New York State. Children under 16 employed in radio, television, and theater. Law and
regulations affecting. July 47,
Personnel. Foremen, training programs. for. Features
of techniques used, as indicated by several research
studies. July 54-56.
Petroleum refineries. Hourly earnings of men in selected occupations, areas, and regions, October-November 1951, and related wage practices. June 661663.

Piecework. International Harvester Co. Guaranteed
minimum earnings, collective-agreement provisions,
1946 and 1950. Aug. 171.
Policemen. United States cities of 100,000 population
or more. Indexes of salary rates, 1924-51; percentage
distribution, according to increase in salary scales,
1950-51. Jan. 52-53.
Polio expense. Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Provision effective, Jan. 1, 1952. June 682.
Population. Changes in vicinity of Savannah River
AEC project, 1951. Aug. 155-158.
Premium pay, United States (see also types of):
Iron and steel industry, basic, 1950. Feb. 162.
Night work, Sunday work, Pacific Gas and Electric
Co., chronology of provisions, 1943-51. May 538.
Price controls, United States:
·Ceiling regulations, by month, covering Nos. 91177 adopted November 1951 to October 1952. Jan.
54-55; Feb. 178-179; Mar. 289-290; Apr. 428;
Mny 561-562; June 688-689; July 50-51; Aug.
192-194; Sept. 300; Dec. 647-648.
Continued until Apr. 30, 1953, by Defense Production Act Amendments of 1952; changes in provisions. Aug. 191-192.
Place in American economy, set forth in resignation report of ESA Administrator, November
1951. Jan. 55-56.
Price stabilization. First year of program (1951) reviewed. Apr. 386-389. See also Price controls.
Prices, United States:
Consumer expenditures survey, 1950. Interpretation and use of results. Oct. 425-428.
- - Spending patterns, families in 91 cities, and
relation of expenditures to disposable income.
Aug. 125-199. Correction in figures. Sept. 262.
Consumers' Price Index (1935- 39
100). Moderate-income families in large cities. By city. Averages, selected midmonth periods, June 1950 and
November 1950-October 1952; by groups of commodities, October 1951-October 1952. See Current labor statistics, tables D-2 and D-3, each
issue.
- - - - By groups of commodities. Annual averages 1913-50, monthly January 1950-October
1952; midmonth averages, by city, October 1951October 1952. See Current labor statistics, tables
D-1 and D-3, each issue.
- - Upward movement and resulting wage
changes, 1951. Feb. 194.
Daily spot market price index. Objectives, commodities covered, and plan of preparation; differences between new and former index. Sept. 301-

=

903.

Escalator clauses in sales contracts; use of BLS
data to calculate price adjustments (technical
note). July 57-59.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

=

Foods, retail. Indexes ( 1935-39
100). By group,
selected annual and monthly averages, 1923 to
June 1950; monthly November 1950-October
1952. See Current labor statistics, table D-4,
each issue.
- - - - Large cities (56), monthly, June 1950
and November 1950-October 1952. See Current
labor statistics, table D-5, each issue.
- - Selected items: Average, by month, N ovember 1951-October 1952; indexes (1935-59
100), June 1950 and monthly November 1950October 1952. See Current labor statistics, table
D-6, each issue.
Indexes, wholesale and consumers' price, 1951.
Differences between in composition and time lag;
problem of seasonal commodities. Jan. 59-61.
Retail. Trend (to January 1952) following General
Ceiling Price Regulation in January 1951. Apr.

=

388-389.

Rise in, 1950-51, and issuance of General Ceiling
Price Regulation, Jan. 26, 1951. Feb. 130- 131.
Wholesale. Indexes (1947- 49
100). By group
and subgroup of commodities, monthly, January
1952-October 1952. See Current labor statistics,
tables D-7 and D-8, each issue, April to December.
- - - - Revision issued in 1952. Construction
and maintenance of index; differences and relation between revision and former indexes. Feb.

=

180-187.

=

- - Indexes (1926
100). By group and subgroup of commodities, August 1939, June 1946;
monthly, November 1950-December 1951. See
Current labor statistics, table D-8, January to
March issues.
- - By group of commodities, selected periods
1913-19; monthly, October 1950- December 1951.
S ee Current labor statistics, table D-7, JanuaryMarch issues, table D-7a, April-D ecemb er issues.
- - Trend (to January 1952) following General
Ceiling Price Regulation in January 1951. Apr.
987-388.

Printing trades:
Book and job and newspaper, San Francisco.
Chronology of wage changes, 1939-51; hourly
and weekly rates, by shifts; and related wage
practices. Sept. 289-298.
- - Union hourly wage scales by occupation, and
changes during preceding year, related wage
practices, workweek schedules, and hourly rates
by population size of cities, July 1, 1951; indexes
of hourly rates and weekly hours, 1939-51. Apr.
412-415.

Production, United States:
Chemicals, organic and inorganic. Trends, and
uses made of products. May 522-524, 527-528.
Electronics industry. Effects of defense program,
1950-51. Feb. 151.-154.
Increase, 1951, summarized; fourth quarterly report of Director of Defense Mobilization, January
1952. Feb. 177.
Productivity, United States:
Construction labor, 7 public housing projects, manweeks of construction labor in selected occupations, by period of operation. Oct. 393.
Gray-iron foundries. Trends in man-hour requirements, 1946-50, 'and factors contributing to increase. Apr. 404-406.
High in America. Evaluation of causes, in light of
current French p•r oblems, by French study group,
November 1951. Feb. 125-129.
Metal mining. Increase through technological progress partly off set by deterioration in quality. Apr.
384-385.

22

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

Public and quasi-public work. Collective bargaining,
implications for use in. Mar. 257-262.
Public Health Service, United States. Occupational
health program. Mar. 253-256.
Pulp, paper, and paperboard mills. Earnings, hourly,
by region and by selected production occupation, April
1952, and related wage practices. Dec. 626-629.
Quarrying, United States, work injuries. See Accident
statistics-Mining and quarrying .
Radio and related products indusitry. Employment and
production, 1920-50; collective agreements ( 40), summary of provisions. Aprr. 400-404.
Radio and television broadcasting, United States. Weekly hours and earnings, by size and type of station,
by occupation, and by size of community, October
1950; comparison of 1949 and 1950 earnings. Jan.
50-52 .
Radio, television, and r elated products manufacture.
Earnings and related wage practices, November 1951.
July 24-26.
Railroad-car manufacturing. Hourly earnings, selected
occupations and regions, Januar y 1952, and related
wage practic,e s. Aug. 181-183.
Railroads. Industrial relations, 1951, summary. Feb.
135-136.
Rents:
Federal controls. Termination, Sept. 30, 1952 (by
Defense Production Act Amendments of 1952)
except in certain areas. Aug. 192.
Increases after 1951 amendments to Housing and
Rent Act. Apr. 389.
Reporting-time pay:
American Viscose Corp. Provisions in effect, 194551. Dec. 633.
Anaconda Copper Mining Co. Provisions effective,
1941 and 1945. July 37.
Glenn L. Martin Co. Provisions effective, 1944- 51.
July 42.
International Harvester Co. Collective-agreement
provisions, 1946-50. Aug. 172.
International Shoe Co. Collective-agreement provisions, 1945. July 33.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Provisions effective, 1940
and 1949. June 681.
North American Aviation, Inc. Provisions effective,
1941 and 1949. June 686.
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Provisions, 1943-51.
May 540.
Printing t rades, San Francisco. Book and job, and
newspa per.
Collective-agreement provisions,
1939-47. Sept. 297.
Shipbuilding industry, Pacific Coast. Provisions
effective, 1941-51. Mar. 305.
Shoe manufacturing, Massachusetts, 1945-51. Feb.
171.
Sinclair Oil Corp. Provisions effective, 1941-52, including call-in pay. N01J. 539.
Rest periods :
American Viscose Corp. Provisions effective, Nov.
30, 1945 (paid; personal time allowance). Dec.
634.
Glenn L. Martin Co. Provisions effective, 1944-48.
July 42.
North American Aviation,· Inc. Provisions, 1941,
1943, and 1949. June 686.
Retirement:
American Viscose Corp. Provisions in effect, 194351. Dec. 635-636.
Anaconda Copper Mining Co. Pension plans, p,r ovisions effective, January 1952. July 38.
Candy and other confectionery products. Propor-


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tion of plants studied having plans in effect, late
1951 and early 1952. Oct. 414.
Chemicals, industrial. Pension plans, extent of use,
October-November 1951. Sept. 289.
Coats and suits (women's) industry. Pension plans,
September 1951. Apr. 41 2.
Cutlery, hand tools, and general hardware, late
1951 and early 1952. Oct. 41 7.
Electroplating, p lating, and polishing industry.
Pension plans, late 1951 and early 1952. Oct. 415.
Footwear industry, August 1951. Feb. 174.
Glenn L. Martin Co. Pension plans, provisions effective, 1948-51. J uly 43.
Hosiery industry. Full fas hioned. Pension plan effective, Jan. 1, 1951. Oct . 410.
- - Pension pla n s, prevalence of in selected areas,
September 1951. Mar. 293.
Insurance-carrier industry. P revalence of plans,
late 1951 and early 1952. Oct. 421.
International Harvester Co. Age and disa bility
pensions, collective-agreement provisions, 194650. Aug. 175.
Iron and steel forgings industry. Pension plans,
extent of coverage, late 1951 and early 1952.
July 27.
Iron and steel industry, basic. Pension pla n s, 1950.
Feb. 163.
.
Laundries, power. Pensions provided in 7
areas, June 1952. Nov. 519.
Liquor distilleries. Pla ns effective, Ap,r il
Nov. 517.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Provisions effective, 1947
and 1949. Jun e 682.
Longshore industry, Pacific. Pension plan established, July 1, 1951. Nov . 527.
Machinery industries. Extent of practice, autumn
1951. May 555.
Milk-dealer industry. Pension plans, provisions effective, late 1951 and early 1952. Oct. 423.
Millinery industry. Provisions under funds established by collective agreements, March 1952. Oct.
420.
Mining. Anthracite and bituminous coal. See W elfare funds.
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. 1951 provisions (plan
established, 1937). 11,f ay 544Paint and varnish industry. Extent of provisions,
June 1952. Nov. 520-521.
Petroleum refineries. Pension plans, October-November 1951. June 663.
·
Pulp, paper, and paperboard mills. Extent of provisions, April 1952. D ec. 629 .
Railroad-car manufacturing. Pension plans, provision in effect, January 1952. Aug. 183.
Sinclair Oil Corp. Annuities, provisions effective,
1942-52. Nov. 544Stamped and pressed metal products industry. Pensions, extent of practice, late 1951 and early 1952.
Aug. 178.
Steel foundries. Pension plans, extent of use, December 1951. Aug. 181.
Textiles. Cotton. E xtent of use, March 1952. Aug.
149.
- - Synthetic. Pension plans, extent of use, March
1952. Sept. 284.
Wood-furniture industry. Extent of pr ovision, pension plans, August 1951 and July 1952. Mar.
297 ; D ec. 630.
Woolen and worsted industry. Plans in effect,
April-May 1952. Oct. 408.
Retirement sepa ration p ay. American Woolen Co. Provisions effective, Nov. 30, 1951. Nov. 524.

SUBJECT INDEX TO VOLUMES 74 AND 75

Safety:
International Harvester Co. Equipment. Collective-agreement provisions, 1946. Aug. 173.
Mining, coal. Prevention of major disasters.
Amendment, July 16, 1952, to Federal Coal Mine
Inspection and Investigations Act of 1941. Nov.
505-507.

President's Conference on Industrial Safety, June
2-4, 1952. Proceedings; subjects covered by
"workshops." July 43-45.
U. S. Bureau of Labor Standards program. President's conferences; technical service to States;
functions under safety laws; publications. Mar.
249-252.

Salvage work. Shipbuilding, West Coast. Provision
made effective, July 1, 1947. Mar. 305.
Saturday and Sunday premium pay:
American Viscose Corp,. Provisions effective, 194551. Dec. 632.
_
American Woolen Co. Provisions effective, Mar. 15,
1952. Nov. 523.
Glenn L. Martin Co. Provisions effective, 1944.
July 41.
International Harvester Co. Collective-agreement
provisions, 1946. Aug. 171.
International Shoe Co. Collective-agreement provisions, 1945. July 32.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Provisions effective, 1937,
1945, and 1947. June 680.
North American Aviation, Inc. Provisions effective,
1941, 1942, 1946, and 1947. June 685.
Shipbuilding industry, Pacific Coast. Provisions effective, 1941-51. Mar. 304.
Saturday (or sixth day) premium pay. Printing trades,
San Francisco. Book and job and newspaper, collective-agreement provisions, 1939-47. Sept. 294.
Savannah River AEC Project:
Community facilities and social changes. Sept. 269278.

Construction employment, and housing of recruits
to labor force. Mar. 270.
Housing and changes in population, survey of November 1951. Aug. 150-158.
Labor aspects (Part I). Labor force, wages, and
recruitment, 1950-51. June 629-639.
Unionization and industrial relations, as of November 1951. July 12-21.
Savings, Consumers'. Preliminary findings of Federal
Reserve System 7th annual survey of consumer finances, January and February 1952. June 672-673.
"Scattered areas." Cut-over land and southern Illinois,
Indiana, Ohio. National Planning Association appraisal of low-income conditions and proposed remedies. July 49-50.
Separation allowances. Iron and steel industry, basic,
1950. Feb. 162.
Service industries-hotels and lodging places, laundries,
cleaning and dyeing plants, motion pictures. See under Employment statistics, and Wages and hours.
Seventh day within workweek. Sinclair Oil Gorp. Provisions effective, June 1, 1944. Nov. 538.
Severance allowance:
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Provisions in effect,
1943-51. May 539.
Printing trades, San Francisco. Newspaper. Collective-agreement provisions, 1939 and 1945. Sept.
298.

Sinclair Oil Gorp.

Provisions effective, 1941-51.

Nov. 540.

Sheet-metal-work industry. Hourly earnings in selected
occupations and areas, late 1951 and early 1952, and
related wage practices. Aug. 176-177.


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

23

Shift differentials:
Anaconda Copper Mining Go. Provisions effective,
1943. July 36.
Chemicals, industrial. Provisions effective, OctoberNovember 1951. Sept. 288.
Cutlery, hand tools, and general hardware, late
1951 and early 1952. Oct. 417. '
Electroplating, plating, and polishing industry, late
1951 and early 1952. Oct. 415.
Foundries, nonferrous, second and third shifts, August 1951. Apr. 409.
Glenn L. Martin Co. Provisions effective, 1944-51.
July 40.
Grain-milling industry. Provisions effective, late
1951 and early 1952. July 28.
Heating-apparatus industry, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 418.
Hosiery industry, selected areas, September 1951.
Mar. 292-293.

International Harvester Co. Collective-agreement
provisions, 1946. Aug. 171.
Iron and steel forgings. industry. Practice in effect,
late 1951 and early 1952. July 26-27.
Iron and steel industry, basic, 1950. Feb. 162.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Provisions effective, 1937,
1940, and 1947. June 680.
Machinery industries, autumn 1951. May 554-555.
North American Aviation, Inc. Provisions effective,
1941, 1943, and 1949. June 685.
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Provisions effective,
1943-51. May 538.
Paint and varnish industry. Provisions effective
Jurle 1952. Nov. 520.
'
Petroleum refineries, October-November 1951. June
663.

Pulp, paper, and paperboard mills, April 1952. Dec.
627.

Radio, television, and related products industry,
November 1951. July 25.
Railroad-car manufacturing. Provisions effective,
January 1952. Aug. 182.
Sheet-metal-work industry, late 1951 and early
1952. Aug. 176.
Shipbuilding industry, Pacific Coast. Provisions effective, 1941-51. Mar. 303.
Stamped and pressed metal products industry.
Practice effective, late 1951 and early 1952. Aug.
178.

Textiles industry. Cotton. Practices prevalent,
March 1952. Aug. 148-149,
- - Synthetic. Practices in effect, March 1952.
Sept. 284-285.
Union agreements in effect in early 1952. Provisions, by industry group, types. of differentials,
amounts, and number of employees affected. Nov.
495-498.

Woolen and worsted industry. Practices in effect,
April-May 1952. Oct. 408.
Shift premium pay:
American Viscose Corp. Provisions effective, 194551. Dec. 632.
Mining, anthracite. Changes in provisions, effective, 1930-51. Nov. 532.
Sinclair Oil Corp. Provisions effective, 1941-52.
Nov. 537.

Shifted-schedule pay. American Viscose Gorp. Provisions effective, 1945-51. Dec. 632.
Shifted-tour pay:
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Provisions effective,
1943-51. May 542.
Sinclair Oil Corp. Provisions effective, 1941-52.
Nov. 541,

24

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

Shifts:
Metalworking, various industries. Patterns of operation in effect, January 1951 and January
1952. Dec. 615-619.
Split. Union provisions regulating or prohibiting,
early 1952. Nov. 497- 498.
Unscheduled; premium pay for. Printing trades,
San Francisco. Book and job, and newspaper.
Collective-agreement provisions, 1939-46. Sept.
293.
Shipbuilding and repairing industry. Employment statistics, May 1950-March 1952; weekly hours and
hourly and weekly earnings, by year, 1947-51, by
month, January 1951-March 1952; and employment
outlook. July 7-11.
Shipbuilding industry, Pacific Coast. Wage changes
and related practices, 1941-51. Mar. 300-305.
Shoe manufacturing. See Footwear industry.
Sick leave:
Chemicals, industrial. Provisions effective, October-November 1951. Sept. 288-289.
Federal employees, classified. Provisions effective,
January 6, 1952, under Oct. 30, 1951, law. Apr.
417.
Foundries, nonferrous. Plans in effect, August
1951. Apr. 409.
Iron and steel industry, basic, 1950. Feb. 162.
Liquor distilleries. Practices in effect, Ap,r il 1952.
Nov. 517.
North American Aviation, Inc. Provisions for pay,
1943 and 1947. June 686.
Pacific Gas and Electric Go. Provisions effective,
1943-51. May 539-540.
Petroleum refineries, October-November 1951. June
663.
Radio, television, and related products industry.
Provisions in effect, November 1951. July 26.
Railroad-car manufacturing. Provisions in effect,
January 1952. Aug. 183.
Sick leave and injury pay:
Glenn L. Martin Co. Provisions effective, 1944-51.
July 42.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Provisions effective, 1941,
1945, 1947, and 1949. June 681.
Sickness absenteeism. Experience under General Motors gr oup-insurance plan, 1949 and 1950. Jan. 38-40.
Sickness and death benefits. Coats and suits (women's)
industry, September 1951. Apr. 411.
Sickness benefits:
Coats and suits (women's) industry. Included in
provisions, September 1951. Apr. 411.
Shoe manufacturing, Massachusetts, 1945-51. Feb.
172.
Sickness insurance. See Accident and sickness insurance; Health insurance; and Sickness benefits.
Sinclair Oil Corp. Chronology of wage changes, and
related wage practices, 1941-52. Nov. 535-544.
Social changes. Structural developments in American
economy and effects upon future trends. ( In address
by Isador Lubin to 1952 Summer Session of Economic
and Social Council.) Oct. 402-403.
Social conditions, worlcl. Report, by U. S. deputy representative, to 1952 session of United Nations Economic and Social Council, New York City. Summary.
Oct. 400-401.
Special-service pay. International Harvester Co. Collective-agreement provisions, 1946. Aug. 172.
Stabilization. See Price stabilization; also Wage stabilization.
Stamped and pressed metal products. Hourly earnings,
selected occupations and areas, late 1951 and early
1952, and related wage practices. Aug. 177-178.
Steel foundries. Hourly earnings of men production
workers and women office workers in selected occupa-


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tions and regions, December 1951 ;· and related wage
practices. Aug. 178-181.
Strikes and lockouts . . See Labor-management disputes.
Subsistence pay:
Longshore industry, Pacific. Change effective, June
18, 1951. Nov. 527.
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Temporary provision,
1943, for certain workers. May 540.
Sinclair Oil Gorp. Provisions effective, 1941-52.
Nov. 540.
Sunday work:
Anaconda Copper Mining Co. Provisions effective,
1941. July 36.
Printing trades, San Francisco. Book and job, and
newspaper.
Collective-agreement p·r ovisions,
1939- 49. Sept. 294.
Sinclair Oil Corp. Provisions effective, 1941-49.
Nov. 538.
Surgical expense:
American Viscose Corp. Benefit provisions effective, June 1, 1946. Dec. 635.
American Woolen Co. Provision effective, Nov. 30,
1951. Nov. 524.
Glenn L. Martin (aircraft). Provisions effective,
1944-52. July 42.
Hosiery industry, full fashioned. Provisions effective, Dec. 1, 1951. Oct. 409.
International Harvester Co. Provisions effective,
1946-52. Aug. 173-174.
Lockheed Aircraft Co. Provisions effective, 194951. June 681.
Longshoring industry, North Atlantic. Provisions
effective, Jan. 1, 1952. Oct. 412.
North American Aviation. Provisions, 1941-51.
June 686-687.
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Provisions
1944-51. May 543.
Shoe manufacturing, Massachusetts, 1945-51. Feb.
172.
Sinclair Oil Co. Provisions effective, 1950 and 1952.
Nov. 543.
Surplus Manpower Committ~e. Established under ODM
Defense Manpower Policy No. 4, effective Feb. 7,
1952. Composition and functions. Apr. 426-427.
Swift & Co. Wage changes and male unskilled ( common labor) hourly wage rates. Jan. 57-58.
Teachers, United States. Public schools, cities of 50,000
or more. Salary trends, 1949-51; salary indexes, by
region and by size of city, 1925-51. Feb. 175-176.
Technical notes :
Net spendable earnings series (BLS), calculation
and uses of. Mar. 306-309.
Price indexes, wholesale and consumers', 1951.
Differences in composition and time lag; problem
of seasonal commodities. Jan. 59-61.
Wholesale price index, revised, 1952. Construction
and maintenance of revised index; differences
and relation between revised index and former
indexes. Feb. 180-187.
·
Technological changes:
•Agriculture. Effects upon size of labor force. June
676-677.

Printing. Hand to machine composition, by International Typographical Union members. May
496.
Technological displacement pay:
American Viscose Corp. Provisions effective,
30, 1945. Dec. 634.
American Woolen Go. Provisions effective, Oct. 1,
1951. Nov. 524.
Telephone installation and maintenance. Pacific Gas
and Electric Co. Expenses provided for installation

SUBJECT INDEX TO VOLUMES 74 AND 75
and maintenance when required to be in home,
effective June 1943 (temporary agreement). May 542.
Television broadcasting. See Radio and television
broadcasting.
Textile industries :
Cotton. Economic problems of, and wage structure, March 1952. Aug. 140-149.
- - North-South cost differentials, effects upon
employment. Aug. 144-145,
Synthetic textiles. Earnings of men and women
production workers, by type of mill; regional
and occupational variations; wage practices. and
related benefits. Sept. 281-285.
Tool and die makers. Mobility between employers, industries, and regions; 11-year (1940-51) job history
of 1,712 workmen analyzed. Dec. 605-610.
Tools and equipment furnished. Sinclair Oil Corp.
Provisions effective, 1949-52. Nov. 541.
Trade (retail, by types of stores, and wholesale). See
under Employment statistics; and Wages and hours.
Training, United States:
Foremen. Developments indicated by results of
recent surveys; techniques employed; analysis of
programs. July 54-56.
Leadership. CIO program, 1951; content, student
body, type of training, and gains from training.
Feb. 140-144.
Transportation, United States. Trucking industry's role
in, 1903-52; volume of intercity freight traffic in tonmiles by kind of transportation, 1949-50. Jan. 29-30.
Travel-time pay:
Anaconda Copper Mining Co. Provisions effective,
1941. July 37.
Mining, anthracite. Changes in provisions, effective, 1930-51. Nov. 532.
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Provisions effective,
1943-51. May 541.
Shipbuilding, Pacific Coast. Provisions effective,
Apr. 1, 1941. Mar. 304.
Sinclair Oil Corp·. Provisions effective, 1941-52.
Nov. 540,
Trucking industry, United States:
Local city. Hourly wage rates and weekly hours,
6 typical cities, and standard workweek, July 1,
1951. Feb. 167-169.
Manpower problems, 1951-52. Jan. 29-30.
Underemployment, Agriculture. Cotton South, mountain, and scattered areas. Causes and pro·p osed
remedies discussed. July 48-50.
Unemployment, United States. Detroit, January 1952.
Jan. III-IV.
Unemployment compensation or insurance:
Court decisions. See Court decisions.
Illinois draft law provisions. Determination of
through collective bargaining. May 505-507.
Iron and steel industry, basic, 1950. Feb. 163.
Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act amended
May 15, 1952, provisions. Dec. 655.
State laws. Tabular analysis of provisions, Sept.
1, 1952. Dec. 623-625.
Statistics. Insured unemployment under State
programs, by geographic division and State,
monthly, September 1950-September 1952. See
Current labor statistics, table A-9, each issue.
Unemployment disability benefits:
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Provisions effective, 194952. June 681-682.
North American Aviation, Inc. Voluntary plan,
provision effective, 1951. June 687.
Union agreements. See Collective agreements.
Union conventions, schedules, July and August 1952.
June 657; July 56.


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25

Union Printers' Home. International Typographical
Union institution for aged and infirm members.
Benefits to, 1951. May 495.
Union security. Safeguards provided in forei~ countries compared with collective bargaining plans in
United States. Aug. 134-139.
Unions. See Labor organizations.
United Labor Policy Committee, United States. Purpose, membership, platform, and activities during life
of committee, December 1950-August 1951. Feb. 132133.
United Mine Workers of America 1Welfare and Retirement Fund. See Welfare funds-Mining.
Vacation benefits. Millinery industry. Collective agreement provisions, March 1952. Oct. 419.
Vacations with pay:
American Viscose Gorp. Provisions effective, 194551. Dec. 633.
American Woolen Co. Provisions effective, Mar.
15, 1952. Nov. 524.
Anaconda Copper Mining Co. Provisions in effect,
1941-47. July 37.
Candy and other confectionery products. Provisions
in effect, late 1951 and early 1952. Oct. 414.
Chemicals, industrial. Provisions effective, October-November 1951. Sept. 288.
Coats and suits (women's) industry, September
1951. Apr. 411.
Collective agreement provisions, 1952, by type of
plans, length of period granted and major industry group; analysis of provisions. in major contracts. Aug. 162-167.
Cutlery, hand tools, and general hardware, late
1951 and early 1952. Oct. 417.
Electroplating, plating, and polishing industry, late
1951 and early 1952. Oct. 415.
Federal employees. Annual leave provisions, effective July 1, 1950, July 1, 1951, and Jan. 6,
1952. Apr. 417.
Footwear industry, August 1951. Feb. 174,
Foundries, nonferrous. Provisions effective, August 1951. Apr. 409.
Glenn L. Martin Co., 1944-52. July 41.
Grain-milling industry. Provisions in effect, late
1951 and early 1952. July 28.
Heating-apparatus industry, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 418.
Hosiery industry, Full fashioned. Provisions, Sept.
17, 1951, concerning employees who leave service
and return before loss of seniority status. Oct.
409.
- - Selected areas, September 1951. Mar. 293.
Insurance-carrier industry, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 420.
International Harvester Co. Collective agreement
provisions, 1946-50. Aug. 172.
International Shoe Co. Collective agreement provisions, 1945-51. July 32.
Iron and steel forgings industry. Provisions affecting production workers, late 1951 and early
1952. July 26-27.
Iron and steel industry, basic, 1950. Feb. 162.
Laundries, power. Practices in effect, June 1952.
Nov. 519.
Liquor distilleries. Practices in effect, April 1952.
Nov. 517.
Lockheed Aircraft Gorp. Provisions effective, 1938,
1940, 1941, and 1949. June 680-681.
Longshore industry. North Atlantic. Change effective, Oct. 1, 1951. Oct. 412.
- - Pacific. Provisions effective, June 18, 1951.
Nov. 527.
Machinery industries, autumn 1951. May 555.

'

26

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

Vacations with pay-Continued
Milk-dealer industry. Provisions effective, late 1951
and early 1952. Oct. 423.
Millwork industry, late 1951 and early 1952. Oct.
424.

Mining, anthracite.

Changes effective, 1930-51.

Nov. 532-533.

North American Aviation, Inc. Provisions, 1941,
1943, and 1947. June 686.
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Provisions adopted,
1943-51. May 539.
Paint and varnish industry. Practices in effect,
June 1952. Nov. 521.
Petroleum refineries. Provisions in effect, OctoberNovember 1951. June 663.
Printing. Commercial, New York City. Changes,
made by Oct. 1, 1951, and Jan. 1, 1952, provisions. Dec. 638.
- - San Francisco, book and job, and newspaper.
Collective agreement provisions, 1939-48. Sept.
296.

Production workers. Growth of practice in industry
since pre-World War period. Aug. 162-163.
Pulp, paper, and paperboard mills, April 1952. Dec.
627, 629.

Radio, television, and related products industry.
Provisions in effect, November 1951. July 26.
Railroad-car manufacturing. Provisions in effect,
January 1952. Aug. 182.
Sheet-metal-work industry. Extent of practice and
provisions, late 1951 and early 1952. Aug. 177.
Shipbuilding industry, Pacific Coast. Provisions
effective, 1941-51. Mar. 304.
Shoe manufacturing, Massachusetts, 1945-51. Feb.
171.

Sinclair Oil Corp.

Provisions effective, 1941-52.

Nov. 539.

Stamped and pressed metal products industry.
Practices with regard to production and office
workers, late 1951 and early 1952. Aug. 178.
Steel foundries. Provisions effective, December
1951. Aug. 181.
Textiles industry. Cotton. Prevalence of practice,
March 1952. Aug. 149.
--- Synthetic. Practices effective, March 1952.
Sept. 283-284.
Wood-furniture industry. Provisions, August 1951
and July 1952. Mar. 297; D ec. 629.
Woolen and worsted mills, April-May 1952. Oct.
407.

Workers severed from employment before taking
vacation, collective-agreement provisions. Aug.
166.

Vehicle and mileage allowance:
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Practice effective,
June 15, 1943. May 541.
Western Union. Increased Aug. 25, 1951, for automobile messengers. Mar. 298.
Vocational rehabilitation:
Federal-State services. Review of work done in
1951; methods by which Federal office assists
State agencies. Aug. 188.
Program plans for 1951 session of United Nations
Social Commission. Assistance given by U. S.
Office of Vocational Rehabilitation. Aug. 188.
Wage adjustments by escalation. See Escalator clauses.
Wage chronologies :
Aircraft manufacturing. Glenn L. Martin Co.,
1944-52. General changes, basic hourly rates by
grade, selected occupations, and related practices.
July 39-43,


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American Viscose Corp., 1945-51. General wage
increases and related wage practices. Dec. 630636.

American Woolen Co. Supplement No. 1: General
wage changes Oct. 7, 1950 to Oct. 1, 1952, and
related wage practices. Nov. 522-524.
Anaconda Copper Mining Co., 1941-51. General
changes and related practices. July 36-38.
Armour & Co., 1949-51. Wage changes and male
unskilled (common labor) hourly wage rates.
Jan. 56-57.

Federal Classification Act of 1949 as amended
October 1951; annual and sick leave provisions
under laws of 1950, 1951, and 1952 [Supp. No. 1
to Wage Chron. No. 13]. Apr. 417.
Hosiery industry, full-fashioned. Supplement No.
2, effective September 1951, including related
wage practices. Oct. 408-410.
International Harvester Co., 1946-52. General
wage changes; hourly rate ranges for day workers by labor grade in 2 unions, August 1951, and
related wage practices. Aug. 167-175.
International Shoe Co., 1945-51. Wage changes
and related wage practices. July 30-34.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp., 1937-51. Wage changes
and related practices. June 677-682.
Longshore industry. North Atlantic. Basic hourly
rates and related wage practices, 1934-51. Oct.
410-412.

- - Pacific. Supplement No. 2: General wage
changes and related wage practices, June 18,
1951, to, June 16, 1952. Nov. 525-527. ,
Mining. Anthracite. Inside, outside, and contract
workers, general wage and hours changes and
related wage practices, 1930-51; daily, weekly,
and hourly earnings, selected occupations. Nov.
528-534.

North American Aviation, Inc., 1941-51. June 683687.

Pacific Gas and Electric Co., 1943-51. Wage
changes, weekly and daily rates, selected occupations, at specified dates, 1944-51, and related
wage practices. May 534-544.
Printing, New York City. Commercial and newspaper. Supplement No. 1. Changes, late 1951
and Jan. 1, 1952, in hourly and weekly rates; and
related wage practices. Dec. 637-638.
Shipbuilding, Pacific Coast, 1941-51. Wage changes
and related wage practices. Mar. 300-305.
Shoe manufacturing, Massachusetts, 1945-51.
Wage changes, minimum plant hourly rates, and
related wage practices. Feb. 169-172.
Sinclair Oil Corp. General wage changes and related wage practices, 1941-52. Nov. 535-544.
Swift & Co., 1949-51. Wage changes and male un
skilled (common labor) hourly wage rates. Jan.
57-58.

Western Union Telegraph, 1951 (supplement to
chronology, 1945-50). Changes through reopening of agreement in 1951. Mar. 297-300.
Wage controls :
Continued until Apr. 30, 1953, by Defense Production Act Amendments of 1952; changes in provisions. Aug. 1.91-192.
Hourly rates of $1 or under exempted by July 1,
1952, amendment to Defense Production Act.
General Wage Regulation 22 issued Oct. 15, 1952,
to effectuate purposes. Dec. 658.
Wage regulations. General Wage Regulations, 1951.
Nos. 18-19, major provisions. Feb . 178.
Wage stabilization. Four "keys to stabilization" outlined in resignation report of ESA Administrator,
November 1951. Summary analysis of report. Jan.
55-56.

SUBJECT INDEX TO VOLUMES 74 AND 75 ,
Wage Stabilization Board (U. S. Government):
Change in functions; reconstitution of Board; p·r ovisions of Defense Production Act Amendments
of 1952. July III, IV; Aug. 191.
Coal miners' and operators' agreements, action concerning, October 1952; resignation of chairman
and industry members. Dec. IV, 656.
Commission-basis compensation. Regulation GWR
20 issued Feb. 13, 1952. Apr. 427.
Disputes certified to in 1951 under authority given
by Executive Order 10233, Apr. 21, 1951; summary. May 511-514.
Labor members nominated for new Board, July
1952. Aug. III.
Pension plans, employer-financed. Regulation 21
concerning, Feb. 22, 1952. Apr. 427.
Policies and rulings, December 1951-October 1952.
Jan. III, 70-71; Feb. 195; Mar. III-IV, 317-318;
Apr. III, IV, 437; May Ill, IV, 570-573; June
III, 696, 697, 699; July 69; Aug. 201-202; Sept.
309, 31 2 ; Oct. IV, 433; Nov. 552; Dec. IV, 656657.

Profit-sharing plans, deferred, employer-financed.
Provision for by GWR 21 of Feb. 22, 1952. Apr.
•

42 7.

Recommendations, regulations, and authorizations.
July 69; Oct. 436.
Reconstitution of, with change in functions, and
abolition of former board, by Defense Production Act (June 30, 1952). July III, IV; Aug. 191.
Resolution covering building and construction mechanics and laborers, issued Mar. 20, 1952, for
year 1952. May 563.
Steel hearings, December 1951-February 1952. Jan.
III; F eb. Ill, 195; Mar. 315; Apr. III, IV, 435;
May III, IV, 570; June 696.
.
10-percent "catch-up" formula for wages, and activities of the reconstituted WSB, 1951. Feb.
131-132, 135.

Wage structure. Se e specific industries under Wages
and hours.
Wages and hours, United States:
Aircraft engine industry. Hourly earnings, weekly
earnings and hours, by year 1947-49, by quarter
June 1950 to September 1951, and for October
and November 1951. Mar. 286.
American Viscose Corp. Wage increases, 1945-51,
and r elated wage practices. Dec. 630-636.
Baking industry. Hourly wage rates, union. Indexes
and trends, 1939- 51. Jan. 25-27.
- - - - Variations, by industry branch, by city
and region, by population and by type of baking,
July 1, 1951. Jan. 27-28.
Building trades. Air Force housing. Hourly rates,
by type of contractor, selected contracts, 1951.
S ept. 268.
- - Hourly wage rates and weekly hours, union.
Indexes, selected years, 1907-51 (table); trend
in rates, 1940-51. Jan. 22-23.
- - Hourly wage rates, union. Variations, by
city and region, July 1, 1951. Jan. 24-25.
- - Public housing, 7 projects in South. Oct. 389,
394,

Candy and other confectionery products. Earnings,
late 1951 and early 1952. Oct. 413- 414,
Changes in rates through collective bargaining,
selected companies and industries. See Wage
chronologies.
Chemicals, industrial. Hourly earnings, men production workers and women production and office workers, selected occupations and regions;
and related wage practices. Sept. 285-289.
- - Organic and inorganic branches. Earnings


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27

and hours of production workers, 1947-52. May
526, 530.

City comparisons. Earnings, indexes, by office and
plant occupations (11 cities), January to June
1951. June 643-647.
Cleaning and dyeing plants. Hourly and weekly
earnings and weekly hours, annual averages
1949-51, monthly, October 1950-September 1952.
See Current labor statistics, table C-1, each
issue.
Coats and suits (women's) industry. Earnings,
hourly, in selected areas, September 1951, and
related wage practices. Apr. 409-41 2.
Common labor. American Viscose Corp. Rates effective at specified dates, by sex, 1945-51. Dec.
631.

Construction industry, housing. See Building
trades, this section.
Cutlery, hand tools, and general hardware, in se-lected occupations and areas, late 1951 and early
1952. Oct. 416-417.
Electrical equipment industry. Weekly and hourly
earnings by year 1947-51, by month January 1951
to June 1952. Nov. 509.
Electronics industry, 1951. Feb. 155.
Electroplating, plating, and polishing industry, late
1951 and early 1952. Oct. 414-415.
Equal pay for equal work provisions, collective
agreements, 1950-51. Jan. 41-45,
Federal service. Classified employees. Salary increases 1950-51, salary rates and indexes of pay
changes 1949-51, selected grades. May 545-547.
- - White-collar workers. Occupations having
over 5,000 employees, average annual salary, all
grades combined, and salary range by grade,
June 30, 1951. Nov. 493, 494.
Finance (banking, securities, insurance). Hourly
and weekly earnings and weekly hours, annual
averages 1949-51, monthly~ October 1950-September 1952. See Current labor statistics, table
C-1, each issue.
Firemen and policemen, cities of 100,000 population
or more. Indexes of salary rates, 1924-51; percentage distribution, according to increase in
salary scales, 1950-51. Jan. 52-53.
Fishermen (Boston Pier Fleet). Annual earnings,
by number of days worked, 1951 and 1948. June
666-670.

Foundries, nonferrous. Earnings, hourly, by occupation, for selected regions, August 1951; and
related practices. Apr. 406-409.
Grain milling . Hourly earnings, certain occupations in selected areas, and related wage practices, late 1951 and early 1952. July 27-28.
Heating-apparatus industry. Selected areas, 1951
and 1952. Oct. 417-418.
Hosiery industry. Full-fashioned and seamless.
Hourly earnings, selected occupations and areas,
and related wage practices, September 1951.
Mar. 291-293.
'
Hotels, year-round. Hourly and weekly earnings
and weekly hours, annual averages 1949-51,
monthly, October 1950-September 1952. See Current labor statistics, table C-1, each issu e.
Hourly earnings, 11 cities, differentials between,
January-June 1951. June 646.
Insurance-carrier industry, standard weekly salaries, selected occupations and areas, late 1951
and early 1952. Oct. 420-421.
International Shoe Co., chronology, 1945- 51. General wage changes, minimum plant rates, and
related wage practices. July 30-34.
Iron and steel forgings industry. Hourly earnings,
selected occupations, four areas, late 1951 and

_

28

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

Wages and hours, United States-Continued
early 1952, and related wage practices.

July

26-27.

Iron and steel industry, basic. Hourly earnings,
selected occupations, United States and selected
regions, January 1951. Feb. 160-161.
Labor-market areas, 40 major. Wage differences
among, late 1951 and early 1952. Dec. 620-623.
Laundries. Power. Hourly earnings, selected occupations, by sex, and weekly earnings of routemen, 31 selected areas, June 1952; related wage
practices. Nov. 518-519.
- - Production workers. Hourly and weekly
earnings and weekly hours, annual averages
1949-51; monthly, October 1950-September 1952;
comparison, specified years 1941-51, and months
October 1950-September 1952, of weekly earnings with value in 1939 dollars. See Current
labor statistics, table C-1 and C-2, each issue.
Liquor distilleries. Hourly earnings, April 1952,
United States, and selected areas and production
occupations. Nov. 515-517.
Longshoremen, Pacific. General wage changes;
basic hourly rates, general and penalty cargoes,
and related wage practices, June 18, 1951, to
June 16, 1952. Nov. 525-527.
Machine-tool accessory establishments. Hourly
earnings, men in selected occupations, 5 cities, by
type of shop, October-November 1951. May 554.
Machine-tool establishments. Hourly earnings, men
in selected occupations, 3 cities, October-December 1951. May 553.
Machinery industries. Hourly earnings, men in selected occupations, 3 cities, by method of wage
payment, October-December 1951. May 553.
Machinery manufacture. Hourly earnings. Indexes
and percent changes, selected cities and occupations, January 1945-January 1951. Jan. 48-49.
- - - - Men in selected occupations, 31 cities,
October-December 1951. May 551-554.
Manufacturing. Production workers. Comparison,
specified years 1941-51, and months October
1950-,September 1952, of weekly earnings with
value in 1939 dollars. See Current labor statistics, table C-2, each issue.
Metal business equipment. Hourly earnings, by regions and for United States, July 1951. Apr.
415-416.
'
Metal mining. Hourly and weekly earnings, 1951,
and weekly hours. Apr. 383.
Military pay and allowances. Increases in 1952;
monthly rates, by grade and length of service;
monthly quarters allowances. July 28-30.
Milk-dealer industry. Selected occupations and
areas, late 1951 and early 1952. Oct. 422-423.
Millinery industry. Selected occupations and areas,
March 1952. Oct. 419-420.
Millwork industry. Selected occupations and areas,
late 1951 and early 1952. Oct. 424.
Mining. Anthracite. Weekly, daily, and hourly
earnings in selected occupations, changes, 1930- .
51. Nov. 533-534.
- - Anthracite and bituminous-coal. Hours and
gross hourly and weekly earnings, years 19491951, months October 1950-September 1952. See
Current labor statistics, table C-1, each issue.
- - Bituminous coal. Comparison, specified years
1941-51, and months October 1950-September
1952, of current weekly earnings with value in
1939 dollars. See Current labor statistics, table
C-2, each issue.
Motiqn-picture production and distribution. Weekly
earnings annual averages 1949-51, monthly, Oc-


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tober 1950-September 1952. See Current labor
statistics, table C-1, each issue.
Motortruck drivers and helpers. City and regional
differentials in union hourly wage rates and
weekly hours, July 1, 1951. Feb. 168-169.
- - Indexes of union hourly wage rates
weekly hours, 1936-51. Feb. 167-168.
Oil-field workers. Hourly earnings, by occupation
and sex, United States and selected regions,
October-November 1951. June 664-666.
Ordnance and accessories manufacture. Weekly
and hourly earnings and hours, by quarter, June '
1950 to April 1952. Aug. 161.
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. chronology, 1943-51.
Wage changes; weekly and daily rates, by occupation, specified dates 1944-51, and related
wage practices. May 534-544.
Paint and varnish industry. Hourly earnings, selected plant occupations, 12 areas, June 1952, and
related wage practices. Nov. 519-521.
Petroleum refineries. Hourly earnings, men in selected occupations, United .States and selected
areas, October-November 1951. June· 661-663.
Printing trades. Book and job, and newspaper.
Hourly rates, union scales, by occupation, July
1, 1951, and changes during preceding year;
weekly hour schedules; average wage-scale levels
by size of city. Apr. 412-415.
- - - - Union wage scales and weekly hours,
indexes 1939-51. Apr. 412.
- - New York City. Commercial and newspaper.
Changes effective in 1951 and 1952. Dec. 637-638.
Public utilities-communications (telephone and
telegraph); electric light and power; gas. Hourly
and weekly earnings and weekly hours, annual
averages 1949-51, monthly, October 1950-September 1952. See Current labor statistics, table
G---1, each issue.
Pulp, paper, and paperboard mills. Hourly earnings, by region and by selected production occupation, April 1952, and related wage practices.
Dec. 626-629.
Radio and television broadcasting. By size and
type of station, by occupation, and by size of
community, October 1950; comp·a rison of 1949
and 1950 earnings. Jan. 50-52.
Radio, television, and related products. Hourly
earnings, by occupation, United States and selected regions, and related wage practices, November 1951. July 24-26.
Railroad-car manufacturing. Hourly earnings, selected occupations. and regions, January 1952;
and related practices. Aug. 181-183.
Sheet-metal-work industry. Hourly earnings, selected occupations and areas, late 1951 and early
1952, and related practices. Aug. 176-177.
Shift differentials. Union provisions for, early in
1952, by types, industry groups, amounts, and
number of employees affected. Nov. 495-498.
Shipbuilding and repairing. Production workers,
average weekly hours and earnings and hourly
earnings, by year 1947-51, by month 1951, and
first 3 months of 1952. July 9.
Shipbuilding. Pacific Coast. Basic wage rates, selected occupations under Metal Trades Department (AFL), 1941-51. Mar. 302.
Sinclair Oil Gorp. Selected refinery occupations,
hourly rates paid, specified dates, 1941-52. Nov.
536-537.
Stamped and pressed metal products. Hourly earnings, selected occupations. and areas, late 1951
and early 1952, and related wage practices. Aug.
177-178.

SUBJECT INDEX TO VOLUMES 74 AND 75
Steel foundries. Hourly earnings of men production workers and women office workers, selected
occupations and regions, December 1951, and related wage practices. Aug. 178-181.
Telegraph workers, Western Union. Selected occupations. Commercial Telegraphers' Union, basic hourly rates, Sept. 1, 1951. Mar. 298-299.
- - - - New York metropolitan area, American
Communications Association, basic hourly rates,
Sept. 1, 1951. Mar. 300.
10-percent "catch-up" formula for wages, Wage
Stabilization Board. Feb. 131-132.
Textile industry. Cotton. Hourly earnings of production workers by sex and type of product, in
yarn, weaving, and integrated mills, and by occupation, selected regions and United States,
March 1952; and related wage practices. Aug.
147-149.

- - - - Percentage distribution of all production
workers by hourly earnings and type of product,
selected regions and United States, March 1952.
Aug. 146.
- - Synthetic. Hourly earnings, men and women
workers, by type of mill, in selected regions,
March 1952. Sept. 281-285.
Trade (retail, by types of stores, and wholesale).
Annual averages, 1949-51; monthly, October
1950-September 1952. See Current labor statistics, table C-1, each issue.
Transit, local, operating employees. Hourly wage
rates, indexes, 1929-51; wage rates, by region
and by population of city, Oct. 1, 1951. Mar.
293-296.

Wood-furniture industry. Hourly earnings, selected
occupations and areas, and related wage practices, August 1951 and July 1952. Mar. 296-297;
Dec. 629-630.
Woolen and worsted textiles earnings, April-May
1952. Oct. 403-408.
Wages and hours, foreign countries:
Hourly and real earnings, 10 Marshall Plan countries, indexes, second quarter, 1950 and 1951.
Jan. 10-11.

Japan. Developments during the occupation. Oct.
395-399.

Warehousing operations. Work-injury rates, by types
of warehouse and by occupation 1950. Feb. 156-158.
Welfare funds :
American Viscose Corp. Provisions effective 194651. Dec. 635.
Longshore industry, Pacific. Changes effective Aug.
1, 1951, and June 16, 1952. Nov. 527.
Mining. Anthracite. Welfare and retirement fund.
Established June 1, 1946. Provisions, and changes
agreed upon. Nov. 533.
- - Bituminous-coal. UMW A Welfare and Retirement Fund. Four-year summary of operation,
and review of year ending June 30, 1951. Jan.
37-38.

- - - - UMW A Welfare and Retirement Fund.
Report on, at union's October 1952 convention.
Dec. 643.

29

Western Union T'e legraph Co. Wage changes and related practices, through reopening of contract in 1951.
Mar. 297-300.
White Collar Workshops. American Labor Education
Service activity. Objectives, history, student body,
program, operating problems. May 508-510.
Women workers, U. S.:
Equal pay for equal work. National conference
on, March 31-April 1, 1952. May 559-560.
- - Private and public policies and collectivebargaining provisions, 1950-51. Jan. 41-45.
Laundries, power. Predominance of women in work
force; hourly earnings, specified occupations,
June 1952. Nov. 518.
Ordnance manufacture. Percent of total workers,
March 1950 and 1952. Aug. 162.
Part-time, selected group of trade and other nonmanufacturing industries, 10 cities, 1951. Jan.
40-41.

Possibilities for increase in number to aid in meeting defense manpower requirements. Mar. 266.
Women workers. Japan. Earnings. Increase in postwar
period. Oct. 397.
Wood-furniture (except upholstered) industry. Hourly
earnings, selected occupations in selected areas, and
related wage practices, August 1951 and July 1952.
Mar. 296-297; Dec. 629-630.
Woolen, and worsted textiles. Hourly earnings in AprilMay 1952. Oct. 403-408.
Work injuries. See Accident statistics.
Work tools, equipment, and supplies, furnishing of.
Mining, anthracite. Provisions effective 1930-51.
Nov. 533.
Worker utilization. Methods and program of U.S. Employment Service. MOJJJ 499-504.
Workers' education:
AFL paper unions. Training program for officers,
stewards, and grievance committeemen. Experience 1948-52. Apr. 395-399.
Business and economic training of workers by employers (summary of National Industrial Conference Board report, 1951). Apr. 418-420.
CIO training program for active and effective leadership, 1951. Program content; student body;
type of training; and gains from training. Feb.
140-144.

Institutes conducted by International Association
of Machinists to train officials for local-union
work. June 653-657.
White Collar Workshops. Objectives of movement
and history of program. May 508-510.
Workmen's compensation:
Iron and steel industry, basic, 1950. Feb. 163.
Legislation, State. See Legislation, U. S., by State.
World Health Organizations, work of. (From address
to 1952 Summer session of United Nations Economic
and Social Council.) Oct. 401.
X-ray and laboratory examination. Pacific Gas and
Electric Co. Provision effective, 1944-51. May 543.
Youth employment. National policy issued by Secretary
of Labor [May 1952], summary. Sept. 299.
*U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1953-254209

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