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2.




WAGE
CALENDAR

1974
Bulletin 1810
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Bureau of Labor Statistics

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WAGE
CALENDAR

1974
Bulletin 1810
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Peter J. Brennan, Secretary
Bureau of Labor Statistics
Julius Shiskin, Commissioner

1974




For sale by the Superintendent o f Documents,
U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402 Price: $1.15
Stock No. 2 9 0 1 -0 1 3 1 3




Preface
As in previous years, the Bureau has again assembled a variety of information on antic­
ipated contract adjustments in this calendar year. Major situations by company and union
are identified in which, during 1974, contracts will terminate, deferred wage increases will
become due, changes in the Consumer Price Index will be reviewed, and contracts will be
reopened. These data take on added dimensions as timely indicators because of some of
the important movements that might be expected in an economy subject to controls and
inflationary pressures stemming from a number of sources, including the energy situation.
This bulletin combines articles which appeared in the December 1973 and January 1974
issues of the Monthly Labor Review, and the Bureau’s listing of major agreements which
expire during the year. Each contract covers 1,000 workers or more. Virtually all of these
agreements are on file with the Bureau’s Division of Industrial Relations and are open to
public inspection. In addition, information was taken from published sources for addi­
tional situations where agreements are due to expire.
Table 7 lists agreements scheduled to expire in 1974 by month and table 8 arranges
them by industry. Tables 9 and 10 present those additional situations just referred to, due
to expire, also by month and by industry. Users should refer to appendix A for a list of
common abbreviations, to appendix B for codes used in identifying the entries by industry,
State, union and employer unit, and to appendix C for a technical note on the data shown
in tables 7-10.
Table 11 lists selected 1974 contract reopenings (for wages, benefits, and working
conditions) by month for selected collective bargaining agreements each covering 1,000
workers or more.
Expirations that were reported to the Bureau too late to be included in tables 7-10 are
listed in table 12.
In several instances, tables 7-10 may list agreements and situations where the parties
have settled before the agreed upon expiration date, such as occurred in aluminum and
can. In such cases, the listing has been retained, but early settlement has been noted in a
footnote.
This bulletin was prepared jointly in the Division of Trends in Employee Compensation
and the Division of Industrial Relations by John L. Gurney and Lena W. Bolton.




in




C o n te n ts
Page
Wage Calendar, 1974 ....................................................................................................................................................
Bargaining .................................................................................................................................................................
Deferred wage increases ...........................................................................................................................................
Cost-of-living escalator provisions ..........................................................................................................................
Bargaining Ahead ..........................................................................................................................................................
Steel industry ..........................................................................................................................................................
Aluminum and can industries .................................................................................................................................
Longshore industry ..................................................................................................................................................
Telephone industry ..................................................................................................................................................
Aerospace industry ..................................................................................................................................................
Coal industry .............................................................................................................................................................
Tables:
1. Calendar of major collective bargaining activity ..............................................................................................
2. Major contract expiration and wage reopening dates, by industry ...............................................................
3. Workers receiving deferred wage increases in 1974 in bargaining situations covering 1,000
workers or more, by month ............................................................................................................................
4. Workers receiving deferred wage increases in1974, by major industry and size of increase..........................
5. Workers receiving deferred wage increases in 1974 in bargaining situations covering5,000
workers or more, by size of increase .............................................................................................................
6. Expiration, reopening, and wage-adjustment provisions of selected collective bargaining
agreements, 1974 ........................................... . ...............................................................................................
7. Collective bargaining agreements covering 1,000 workers or more expiring in 1974, by
month of expiration .........................................................................................................................................
8. Collective bargaining agreements covering 1,000 workers or more expiring in 1974,
by industry ............................................................
9. Additional collective bargaining situations covering 1,000 workers or more with expirations
in 1974, by month of expiration ......................................................................................................................
10. Additional collective bargaining situations covering 1,000 workers or more with expirations
in 1974, by industry ..............................................................................
11. Selected agreements reopening in 1974 covering 1,000 workers or more, by month .................................
12. Late listing of agreements expiring in 1974 covering 1,000 workers or more, by m o n th ............................
Appendixes:
A. Common abbreviations .......................................................................................................................................
B. Definition of codes .....................
C. Explanatory note ................................................................................................................................................




1
2
4
4
7
7
8
8
9
9
9

2
3
4
5
6
11
16
28
42
50
61
63

66
67
73




W a g e C alendar, 1974
The year 1974, which begins with uncertainty over
the continuation of existing wage and price controls,
will also be one of heavy collective bargaining activity.
Following a period of relative labor peace, negotiators
will come to the bargaining table in an economic
climate which has been dominated by rapidly rising
prices, a tightening labor market, and, in contrast, fears
expressed over the possibility of a recession induced or
exacerbated by an energy crisis. Amid these conflicting
signs, there was speculation whether declines in the size
of collective bargaining settlements in 1973 would con­
tinue in the new year or whether unexpected contract
reopenings might be triggered by changes in stabilization
or energy policies.
One aspect of the bargaining climate already certain
is the size of deferred wage increases— those negotiated
in prior years to go into effect during 1974. Such
deferred increases will average 5.0 percent, essentially
unchanged from last year’s gain of 4.9 percent. How­
ever, the number of workers receiving these gains will
be relatively low— 4.75 million, compared with 7.6
million in the peak year 1969. Deferred increases
generally affect fewer workers in years when many con­
tracts come up for negotiation. This year’s decline also
may be due in part to the recent increase of short-term
contracts, especially in the construction industry.
Altogether at least 5.2 million workers will be covered
by major collective bargaining agreements that either
expire this year or contain wage reopening provisions.1
(Major agreements cover 1,000 workers or more.) Bar­
gaining in the steel, can, aluminum, construction, com­
munications, electrical machinery, aerospace, longshoring, railroad, and mining industries will dominate the
scene, with the results likely to affect stabilization
efforts and wage decisions throughout the economy.
Most of the agreements expiring this year were last
negotiated in 1971. During that year, when pressure
for wage settlements to recoup lost purchasing power
was dominant, substantial settlements were achieved in
many of the industries which are now up for renegotia­
tion. In addition, cost-of-living escalator clauses were in­
corporated into several key industry contracts and have
provided for periodic wage adjustments to keep up
with rising prices. In part, because of these factors, the
catchup pressures which existed in 1971 should not




be as much in evidence during 1974. 2 (However,
clauses permitting the reopening of contracts this year
due to a national emergency, such as an energy crisis,
exist in at least 148 contracts, covering more than a
million workers.)
The last time negotiations were concluded by bar­
gainers scheduled to meet again this year, the average
contract duration was 31 months and the average annual
rate of wage change (including subsequent cost-of-living
increases) was 7.8 percent. Bargainers in manufacturing
last agreed to contracts with an average 34-month dura­
tion and 8.6 percent annual wage gains. In nonmanufac­
turing, contracts called for an average duration of 29
months and annual increases of 7.2 percent. Construc­
tion contracts averaged 30 months in length, providing
7.0 percent annual wage gains.
A total of 4.3 million workers are covered by con­
tracts which neither expire nor provide for a wage
reopening in 1974. Nearly all, however, will receive
deferred wage increases agreed upon when their con­
tracts were negotiated. The number of workers covered
by escalator clauses remains near the 1973 level of 4.1
million. (Workers covered by deferred increases, escalator
clauses, or contracts scheduled to expire in 1974 are not
necessarily in three mutually exclusive groups: Some
contracts include both deferred increases and escalator
provisions or may provide for such increases at some
time during the year the contract is due to expire.)
1 Such clauses provide for the time or the circumstances
under which negotiations can be requested, prior to the expiration
of the contract. Reopenings are usually restricted to wage issues
and, perhaps, other specified economic issues, not to the contract
as a whole.
The emergency reopening clauses mentioned in the text pro­
vide that the contract or specific provisions o f the agreement
may be reopened in the event that significant occurrences happen
in the economy, society, or bargaining unit, such as war, national
disaster, critical business reverses, or the imposition o f controls
on wages or prices. In late December 1973, the Teamsters’ union
demanded that its national contract with the trucking industry
be reopened to increase wages of over-the-road truckers whose
earnings were being affected by the fuel-shortage.
For a discussion of previous settlement patterns in some of
the industries scheduled to bargain in 1974, see Lena W. Bolton,
“ Bargaining ahead: Major contracts expiring in 1974, “M onthly
Labor Review, December 1973, pp. 4 3 -5 1 . The article also in­
cludes a table of selected contracts covering 5,000 workers or
more which have expiration, reopening, and wage-adjustment
provisions effective in 1974.

Data included in this article reflect wage increases
scheduled to become effective in 1974, as well as infor­
mation on contract expirations and reopenings. Deferred
increases have been tabulated as they were negotiated by
the parties, without regard to possible subsequent action
by stabilization authorities.
At the time this article was completed (late Novem­
ber 1973) the Bureau of Labor Statistics had informa­
tion on 1,973 contracts covering 9.2 million of the
10.3 million workers under major private collective
bargaining agreements in all industries but farming.3
The remaining 1.1 million workers, who were generally
excluded from the data in this article, were covered by
agreements scheduled to expire later in 1973, still being
negotiated, not yet approved by the appropriate stabili­
zation agency, or whose terms were not yet available.4

are expected to help maintain a continuance of the
industrial peace evident during 1973. Other major in­
dustry contracts which will be renegotiated during the
coming year cover 800,000 construction workers, with
bargaining set for April—September; nearly 600,000 Bell
Telephone System employees, bargaining in July; some
Table 1.

Calendar of major collective bargaining activity

[W orkers in thousands]

Year and m onth

P rin c ip al industry
affected

All years.
Total 1974 _ _

Bargaining

Bargaining during the year will start off lightly and
quicken in pace as the year progresses. (See table 1.) The
number of workers covered under contracts to be rene­
gotiated will exceed last year’s, when contracts covering
some 4.75 million workers were negotiated. In the normal
3-year cycle of bargaining there are usually 2 heavy years,
followed by 1 year of light bargaining. This year would
normally be the second of 2 heavy years of bargaining.
However, the number of workers under contracts up for
renegotiation in 1974 has been further increased due to
the fact that some short-term contracts negotiated last
year (in construction and railroads) will again be up for
renegotiation.
Early in the year, representatives of the major can
companies and their 33,000 employees will meet at the
bargaining table, as contracts expire in February. In re­
cent settlements, the can contracts have set the pattern
for aluminum and steel negotiations later in the year.
This year the steel industry has adopted a new arbitration
agreement which establishes on an experimental basis
voluntary final and binding arbitration for unresolved
collective bargaining issues. The new bargaining policies
These agreements include multiplant or multifirm agree­
ments covering 1,000 workers or more, even though individual
units may be smaller. Although approximately 1 American
worker in 5 is a union member, only about 1 in 9 is included in
an agreement covering 1,000 workers or more in the private
nonfarm
sector.
4
Situations for which the necessary information was not
available include (a) 66 agreements which expire subsequent to
late November 1973, covering 303,500 workers; (b) 99 contracts
which expired earlier in the year, but where negotiations were
continuing, covering 459,475 workers; (c) 120 contracts in which
a settlement had been reached, but had not yet been approved
by the appropriate stabilization agency, covering 357,415 work­
ers; and (d) 35 contracts whose status was unknown or where the
terms of the agreement were not available, covering 72,230
workers.




Sched uled
wa ge
reopen lings2

Ccntiract
axp ira l Jons 1

January......... ........ ...........
February........... ...............
March_________ ____
A p r i l . . . ..................
May
J u n e .................................
July__________________
August
. . . __
S eptem b er.....................
October______________
November____________
December

Food__________ _______
Fabricated metal
products
Local and suburban
transit
Local and suburban
transit
Construction...............
Construction__________
Electrical equipm ent.. .
Primary metals_______
Water transportation...
Transportation equip­
ment
Mining________________
R ailroads....... .................

S itu ­ W ork­
ations ers

S itu ­
ations

W ork­
ers

2,298

10,302

92

340

1,097

4,933

69

259

54
45

155
131

5
4

9
15

98

291

7

78

156

406

14

26

132
154

449
556

9
13

16
64

96
102
84
65

902
685
278
221

4
5
3
3

8
21
8
6

33
78

211
648

2
—

9
__

538

1,685

23

81

January ......................... Food stores.......................
February........... ............... Transportation equip­
ment
M arch............................... Construction.................. ..
A p ril.................................. Gas and electric
utilities
Construction__________
May
_____ _____
June ___ ____ . . . Construction...... ........... ..

32
32

92
77

1
1

1
2

59
81

231
192

2
8

4
16

97
78

286
302

3
3

4
37

Fabricated metal
products
Transportation equip­
ment
Apparel______________
Eating and drinking
places
Transportation equip­
ment
Railroads_____________

27

63

1

1

39

91

2

7

39
30

214
59

—
1

—
4

Total, 1975_____

J u l y . . . ____ _________
A ugust.................. ...........
September___________
October______________
November........................
D e c e m b e r........ ............

11

19

13

59

7

1

__

332

2,613

January— June_______
July— December______

Trucking.............. .............
Transportation equip­
ment

221
111

1,504
1,109

...

1977........... ..........

Hotels.................................

5

17

__

_

Year unknown or Construction.....................
in negotiation

326

1,054

-

-

Total, 1976____

1 Two utility agreements covering 22,550 workers are excluded since they have no
fixed expiration or reopening date.
2 Excludes 300,000 workers. 270,000 in the ladies apparel industry, whose contracts
provide for possible wage reopeners during the year based on increases in the Consumer
Price Index.
N O TE : Only bargaining situations in the private, nonagricultural economy affecting
1,000 workers or more are considered in this table. Because of rounding, sums of indi­
vidual items may not equal totals.

500,000 railroad employees, bargaining in December;
and 115,000 men’s clothing workers, bargaining in May.
(See table 2.)
Of the 9.2 million workers whose contracts have been
studied, only 95,000 are covered by agreements that ex­
tend beyond 1974 and do not provide for specific de­
ferred increases or for an unconditional wage reopening.
Nearly all of these workers may receive a wage change at
some time during the year, however. For example, con­

tracts covering a number of workers in the textile indus­
try do not contain a specific date for a wage reopening,
but characteristically are reopened after the nonunion
sector of the industry grants a general wage increase.
Also in some industries, a rise in the Consumer Price
Index may trigger a reopening. This type of reopening
provision covers about 300,000 workers, primarily in the
ladies’ apparel industry, and may provide for an unsched­
uled increase during the year.

Table 2. Major contract expiration and wage reopening dates, by industry
[Workers in thousands]
Scheduled wage reopening in2—

Year of contract te rm in atio n 1
U nknow n, in
negotia tio n ,
or pending
action

T o ta l
Ind ustry

1975

1974

1977

1976

1975

S itu a ­
tions

W ork­
ers

S itu a ­
tions

W ork­
ers

S itua­
tions

W ork­
ers

S itu a ­
tions

W ork­
ers

2,613

5

17

326

1,054

69

259

23

81

1,738

2

2

77

227

20

46

8

10

_
—

_

_
1

—
2

—
1

_

10

_
20

S itu a ­
tions

W ork­
ers

S itu a ­
tions

W ork­
ers

S itu a ­
tions

Workres

S itu a ­
tions

W ork­
ers

All industries____________

2,298

10,302

1,097

4,933

538

1,685

332

Manufacturing....................... ...........

1,136

4,603

574

1,902

264

735

219

Ordnance and accessories..........................
Food and kindred products.......................
Tobacco manufacturing__________ _____
Textile mill products__________________
Apparel and other finished products___

1974

19
130
8
29
63

45
366
27
71
572

10
61
7
20
11

26
139
25
51
134

8
26
__
7
24

17
55
—
18
202

1
33
1
2
27

2
152
2
2
232

—
—

—
—

—
1

—
4

—
—

—
—

—
—

—
—

—

1

Lumber and wood products, except
furniture................... ................................ Furniture and fixtures._____________ .
Paper and allied products................ ........
Printing, publishing, and allied products.
Chemicals and allied products_________
Petroleum refining and related
industries____ ____ ______ __________

25
21
70
37
70

85
37
124
68
135

2
4
36
19
39

2
10
57
34
72

18
8
17
6
16

75
11
27
9
31

3
8
11
3
12

6
14
31
12
27

—
—
—
—
1

—
—
1

2
1
6
9
2

3
1
9
14
4

—
—
3
1
4

—
—
6
1
8

1
1
1
1
2

2
1
1
1
2

25

56

21

50

4

6

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

Rubber and miscellaneous plastics
products................................... ...................
Leather and leather products__________
Stone, clay, and glass products..............
Primary metal industries............................
Fabricated metal p ro d u c ts .................. ..

23
26
41
119
63

107
72
93
600
131

5
18
18
93
31

7
59
52
556
75

—
6
18
16
18

—
10
32
24
28

16
—
2
8
9

94
—
3
17
21

1
—
—
—
—

1
—
—
—
—

1
2
3
2
5

6
3
6
2
8

—
1
—
4
—

—
2
—
7
—

—
—
—
—
—

—
—
—
—
—

Machinery, except electrical......................
Electric machinery, equipment, and
supplies........................................................
Transportation equipm ent.......... ...............
Instruments and related products...........
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries.

97

284

59

108

15

33

12

82

—

_

11

61

2

3

—

—

131
106
21
12

540
1,122
43
24

55
52
12
1

165
260
19
2

21
27
4
5

44
90
17
6

46
17
3
5

285
738
4
16

—
—
—
—

—
—
—
—

9
10
2
1

46
35
4
1

1
1
1
1

2
4
10
1

1
—
—
—

2
—
—
—

Nonmanufacturing...........................

1,162

5,699

523

3,031

274

952

113

875

3

15

249

827

49

213

15

71

15
552

132
1,716

11
231

124
808

1
125

1
366

1
100

—

—
—

2
159

6
438

—
17

—
35

—
6

—
14

82
20
39

804
557
152

35
15
15

178
525
46

17
2
6

92
15
14

20
_
—

494
—
—

—
—
—

—
—
—

10
3
18

39
16
92

3
—
—

8
—
—

1
—
—

1
—
—

48
76
27
145
31
24
79
24

764
212
67
601
110
151
311
123

33
26
10
75
13
9
44
6

680
70
17
254
35
60
211
23

5
31
7
36
9
10
15
10

16
91
12
194
24
51
45
31

2
4
7
16
6
5
11
4

12
7
33
52
39
46
41
50

_
—
—
1
1
—
—
1

_
—
—
2
2
—
—
11

8
15
3
17
2
—
9

56
43
5
99
10
—
14
9

3
8
1
11
3
1
2

13
18
2
118
12
3
4

_
3
—
2
—
1
—
2

_
6
—
12
—
3
—
36

Mining, crude petroleum, and natural
gas production________ _____________
Construction__________ ________ ______
Transportation, except railroads and
a irlin e s ..____ _____________________
Railroads.........................................................
Airlines.............................................................
Communications.................. ..........................
Utilities: gas and electric_______ ______
Wholesale trade.............................................
Retail trade, except restaurants...............
Restaurants.....................................................
Finance, insurance, and real estate.........
Services, except h o t e ls ..................... ..
Hotels......... ................. ..................... ...............

1 See table 1, footnote 1 for notes on data limitations.
2 See table 1, footnote 2 for notes on data limitations.




1
37

—

31

N O TE: Only bargaining situations in the private, nonagricultural economy affecting
1,000 workers or more are considered in this table. Because of rounding, sums of
individual items may not equal totals.

The number of workers receiving deferred increases
this year will be about the same as last year but below
the level of earlier years, as the following tabulation
shows:

1 9 6 6 ...
1967. ..
1 9 6 8 ...
1 9 6 9 ...
1 9 7 0 ...

Workers
(in millions)
4.3
4.5
5.6
7.6
5.7

1 9 7 1 ...
197 2 ...
197 3 ...
197 4 ...

Workers
(in millions)
5.8
6.7
4.9
4.75

Of the 4.75 million workers scheduled to receive deferred
increases, some 800,000 are under contracts which will
also expire during the year. About 2.7 million workers,
or 53 percent, will receive their increases within the first
half of the year. (See table 3.) Nearly 385,000 of these
workers will receive additional gains during the second
half of the year.
Table 3. Workers receiving deferred wage increases in
1974 in bargaining situations covering 1,000 workers
or more, by month
[Workers in thousands!
P rincip al industries affected

E ffective month

T o ta l1

4,758

....

January
February
__ ___
March
_ A pril________________
May . _____________
June
July_________________
__
August
__
September
October_____________
November __ ______
December
. ___

W orkers

Railroads; petroleum________ _______ . . .
Stone, clay, and glass_______________________
F o o d ______________________________________
Construction; machinery (except e le c tric al)...
Electrical equipment; apparel_______________
Apparel; lum ber____________________________
Trucking (automobile transportation); rubber.
Electrical equipment; food___ _____________
Transportation equipment; food_____________
Food stores; machinery (except electrical)___
Electrical equipment............................... ..............
Electrical equipment________ _____________

853
168
171
290
m
691
930
85
944
195
220
99

1 This total is smaller than individual items since 385,115 workers will receive two
increases. The total is based on data available in late November 1973 and thus may
understate the number of workers receiving deferred wage increases.
N O TE : Only bargaining situations in the private, nonagricultural economy are
considered in this table. Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal
totals.

The average increase will be 5.0 percent, or 25.3 cents
per h o u r.5 Deferred increases in the nonmanufacturing
sector will average 5.5 percent, or 30.8 cents per hour,
while the corresponding gains in manufacturing will be
4.6 percent or 20.3 cents. (See table 4.) In 1973, the aver­
age increases were 5.3 percent and 4.4 percent, respec­
tively. Some 466,000 construction workers will receive
deferred increases averaging 5.3 percent. 6 Other large
groups receiving deferred gains will be 500,000 railroad
employees and some 492,000 trucking industry employ­
ees. In manufacturing about 700,000 workers in the auto




industry will receive a 3.0-percent deferred increase and
327,000 electrical machinery workers will receive an in­
crease averaging 5.5 percent.
The presence of a cost-of-living escalator provision in
a contract often tends to reduce the size of the scheduled
deferred increase. Deferred increases under contracts
without escalator clauses cover 2.8 million workers and
will average 5.4 percent, while those under contracts with
escalator clauses cover 1.9 million workers and average
only 4.5 percent. However, depending on the course of
consumer prices, increases in the latter contracts may be
augmented by the individual escalation formulas.
Fringe benefits— such as retirement and health insur­
ance payments— now constitute nearly a fourth of total
compensation. When the cost of deferred benefit improve­
ments is combined with the wage increases, the average
gain in the total wage-benefit package will be 6.2 percent
in agreements covering 5,000 workers or more. (See
table 5.) The comparable average increase for 1973 was
5.4 percent.

Cost-of-living escalator provisions

The number of workers covered by cost-of-living
clauses, at 4 million,7 will be almost the same as were
covered in 1973. This is about double the number under
such clauses during the midsixties. The wages of 3 mil­
lion workers are scheduled for cost-of-living reviews dur­
ing 1974. Reviews will be conducted quarterly for 1.9
million workers, semiannually for about 93,000, and an­
nually for 987,000, with the remainder scheduled for
reviews in other sequences. Some 1 million workers are
under clauses which do not schedule reviews, as their
contracts expire during the year.
Some of the major industries where cost-of-living re­
views are scheduled in 1974 include the following: The
5 The averages referred to in the text are arithmetic means.
Both means and medians are shown in the tables.
Some 75,000 of these construction workers will receive
deferred increases under settlements in which the parties agreed
to a total wage and benefit package, with the ultimate allocation
between wages and benefits subject to determination by the
union. Since this allocation was not known at the time this article
was written, the entire amount was treated as a wage increase.
To these workers should be added some 600,000 produc­
tion workers in nonunion and small union manufacturing plants.
(Comparable data for workers in nonunion and small union non­
manufacturing establishments are not available.) The 4 million
includes workers in those situations previously containing such
clauses, but where agreements had not been renegotiated at the
time this article was written or, if an agreement had been reached
it had not yet been approved by appropriate stabilization authori­
ties, where applicable. It was assumed that escalator clauses would
be continued in these contracts. Additionally, some 600,000
postal service employees will have their earnings adjusted by in­
creases in the Consumer Price Index.

[Workers in thousands]
M a n u fac tu rin g

A verag e increase

Total.........................

N um ­
ber of
s itu a ­
tions

A il
p riv a te
non ag ri­
c u ltu ra l
industries

T o t a l1*

Food
and
kindred
p ro d ­
ucts

883

4,758

2,515

205

24
23
11
24
14
12

112
49
33
158
35
34

40
10
9
139
26
18

3

A p­
parel

444

N onm an ufacturin g

Lum ber Rubber
and
and
wood
m iscel­
prod­ la n e o u s
ucts
plas­
except
tics
fu rn i­
prod­
tu re
ucts

94

81

Com­
W are­
m u n i­
hous­
Contract Tra n s p o r­ c a tio n s ,
ing,
con­
tatio n
gas, and w h o le ­
s tru c ­
e lectric
sale
tion
and
u t ili­
tie s
re ta il
tra d e

M e ta l­
w orking

T o ta l *

1,390

2,243

466

7
2

9
14
16

71
39
24
19
9
16

794
104
56
39
34

64
104
269
116
36

16
5
21

302
238
505
199
61

52
55
69
50
41

1,148

96

S erv­
ices

177

259

CENTS PER HO UR
Linder 10 cents...................
10 and under 11.................
11 and under 12.................
12 and under 13.................
13 and under 14.................
14 and under 15.................

—
—
4
—
—

5
1
1
113
9
2

15
17
19
21
23

and
and
and
and
and

under
under
under
under
under

17________
19............ ..
2 1 .............. ..
23.................
2 5 ................

79
61
104
50
35

926
289
500
324
94

861
185
232
208
58

2
5
67
70
6

42
54
96
73

25
30
35
40
45

and
and
and
and
and

under
under
under
under
under

3 0 ________
3 5 ________
40________
4 5 ________
50________

190
80
51
37
26

896
320
527
214
61

593
83
22
15

16
19
10

48

50
55
60
65
70

and
and
and
and
and

under
under
under
under
under

55................
6 0 ________
6 5 ________
70............
75.................

32
10
5
5
5

102
15
21
10
11

15

75 and under 8 0 .................
80 and under 85.................
85 and over.........................

1
1
3

1
2
23

Mean incre a s e-.................
With escalators_____
Without escalators...
Median increase.................

_
_
_
-

25.3
24.5
25.8
22.4

_
1
—
—
—
—

_
—
—
—
—
—

_
4
—
—
~

—

_
4

67
6
3

—
—
6
84

10
5
—

—
—
2
—

—

_
—
—
—
—
—

1
10
—
—
—
5
5
83
171
95

2

8

4
16
14
7
2

2
12

12
3
47
12
15

22
10
27
7
7

17
5
16
26
11

27
40
6
4
3

20
35
6

4
2
—
—

162
97
380
105
6

__

45
22
9
5
—

—
—

—
—

—
—

—

281
17
1
9
—

—
—
—
1

—
—
—
—

_
—
—
—
—

—
—
—
—
—

_
—
—
—
—

—
—
—
—
1

88
15
21
10
10

80
14
20
10
10

7
1
1
—
—

—
—
—
—
—

1
—
—
—
—

_
—
—
—
—

_
—
—

_
-

_
—
—

_
—
—

_
—
—

—
—
—

1
2
23

1
2
6

—
—

—
—
—

_
—
—

_
—
—

18.1
(3)
18.1
18.9

27.6
( 3)
27.6
2 8 .0

2 4.8
( 3)
24.8
2 5 .0

19.1
18.5
22.1
16.4

31.5
3 8 .0
26.3
3 0 .8

3 4 .0
16.1
35.3
35.7

19.5
32.3
17.5
2 0 .0

2 0.8
27.5
20.7
2 0 .0

5

_
—
1
4
76

—
5

20.3
19.2
21.7
18.4

23.3
2 2.0
25.8
21.9

__

—
—
__

3 0 .8
3 6.9
28.7
3 0 .0

39.6
( 3)
39.6
4 0 .0

17

—
—

PERCENT4
Under 3 percent________
3 and under 4 __________
4 and under 5 __________
5 and under 6 __________
6 and jnder 7 ___________

53
92
143
257
222

146
1,072
958
947
1,236

54
931
288
525
608

4
19
43
39
92

112
51
248

7 and under 8 .....................
8 and under 9 . . ..............
9 and under 10_________
10 and under 11.................
11 and under 12________

69
26
10
5
2

195
85
84
11
3

74
24
6
5

17

29

1
1
1
1

1
2
6
13

12
13
14
15

and
and
and
and

under 13.................
under 14.......... ..
under 15________
over.........................

Mean increase...................
With escalators_____
Without escalators...
Median increase.................

_
_
_
—

5 .0
4 .5
5 .4
5 .2

—

—
19
74
-

27
887
78
292
80

92
141
669
422
628

38
63
98
130
60

25
2
490
136
465

4
2
12
14
22

10
8
5
4

33
17
20

13
2
1
1
—

40
2

—

121
61
78
6
3
1
2
6
13

—

—
1
—■
—

—
—
—
—

—
—
—
—
—

_
—
—
—

—
—
—
—

—
—
—
—

—
—
—
—

—
—
—
—

—
—
—
—

4 .6
3 .9
5 .5
4 .9

5 .4
5.1
5 .9
6 .0

5 .6
( 3)
5 .6
6 .0

6 .0
( 3)
6 .0
6 .0

5.1
(3)
5.1
5.1

3 .9
3 .7
5 .2
3 .0

1 Includes workers in the following industry groups for which separate data are not
shown: tobacco (1,500); textiles (10,760); furniture (25,525); paper (49,510); petroleum
refining (55,695); leather (34,135); stone, clay, glass, and concrete products (38,195);
printing (17,200); and chemicals (49,250).
1 Includes 2,150 workers in the mining industry and 96,000 in finance, insurance, and
real estate for which separate data are not shown.
3 Industry contains no contracts with escalator clauses.
4 Percent of estimated straight-time average hourly earnings.




_

1
—
—
—
—

5 .5
6 .0
5 .3
5 .5

—
—
—
—

1
—

__

6
—
5 .3
( 3)
5 .3
5 .2

13
5 .3
6 .0
4 .7
5 .5

_
39
18
39
10

6
29
50
102
49
8
9
—
—
—
—
—
—
—

6 .2
2 .9
6 .5
6 .4

—
3
1
—

22
14
32
2
2

—
—

—
—
—
—

5 .4
6.1
5 .3
5 .5

6 .3
5 .5
6 .3
5 .9

2

N O TE: Workers are distributed according to the average adjustment for all workers
in each bargaining unit considered. Deferred wage increases include guaranteed
minimum adjustments under cost-of-living escalator clauses. The number of workers
affected in each industry is based on data available in late November 1973, and
thus may understate the number of workers receiving deferred wage increases. Only
bargaining situations in the private, nonagricultural economy covering 1,000 workers
or more are considered in this table. Because of rounding, sums of individual items may
not equal totals.

Table 5. Workers receiving deferred wage increases in
1974 in bargaining situations covering 5,000 workers or
more, by size of increase
[Workers in thousands]

A verag e d e ferre d w age and benefit increase as a percent
of e xisting wage and benefit exp end itures

W orkers

All settlements providing deferred changes 1__________________

3,183

Under 3 percent____________________________________________________
3 and under 4 percent________________ ___ . .
______ _______
4 and under 5 percent___________ . . . _ . . . . . . .
__________
5 and under 6 percent___________ . . . . . . . .
_
.
______
6 and under 7 percent_____ . . . .
...
...
7 and under 8 percent_____ ___
8 and under 9 percent______ .
. . . . . .
9 and under 10 percent.. . . . _______
. . .
10 and under 11 percent _______
______
11 and under 12 percent _______________________________ __________
12 percent and o v e r ____________________________________________ . .

64
659
176
414
828
185
800
8

Mean increase (percent)_________________________________________ . .
Median increase (percent)______________________________ __________

6 .2
6 .4

50

1 The total excludes those workers covered by contracts expiring in 1974 receiving a
deferred benefit change only.
NOTE: Only bargaining situations in the private, nonagricultural economy are
considered in this table. Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal
totals.

steel industry, where reviews will take place in March
and June (before the contracts expire on July 31) with




no maximum limit on increases; the auto industry, with
quarterly reviews with neither a minimum guarantee nor
a maximum limit; and the trucking industry, where con­
tracts provide for an annual review in July with a mini­
mum and a maximum adjustment. Other sectors of the
economy where cost-of-living escalator clauses are prev­
alent include the farm and construction equipment in­
dustries; the aluminum, copper, and can industries; elec­
trical equipment; meatpacking; and the communications
(telephone) industry.
With the exception of some 115,000, workers tied to
various Bureau of Labor Statistics’ city indexes, workers
are covered by clauses tied to the Bureau’s National Con­
sumer Price Index. Some 1.4 million workers are covered
by escalator clauses providing for a minimum guarantee
while 1 million workers are covered by clauses which set
a maximum limit on increases. In addition, some 857,000
workers will have both minimum guarantees and maxi­
mum limits. In this article, guaranteed minimum escalator
adjustments are generally treated as deferred increases.
For example, workers receiving a 10-cent deferred plus
a 3-cent guaranteed cost-of-living mimimum are considered
to have received a 13-cent deferred wage increase.

B argaining Ahead
The outcome of a relative handful of the collective
bargaining negotiations scheduled next year will prob­
ably have significant effects throughout the Nation’s
economy. During 1974, union and management repre­
sentatives will come to the bargaining table to work out
the terms of 123 major agreements, each covering 5,000
workers or more and many in vital sectors of the
economy. Of the expiring contracts, 65 are in manufac­
turing, 1 is in mining, 6 are in transportation, 30 are in
communications, 3 are in utilities, and 18 are in service
industries. Together they represent 45 percent of the
273 agreements of this size in the United States, and
cover 1.8 million of the 4.5 million workers under major
contracts.1 Workers represented next year at major bar­
gaining tables constitute about 2 percent of the total
work force.
Naturally, the climate for these 1974 negotiations in
part will be set by the state of the economy— at present
somewhat unsettled. Although business activity and em­
ployment are at or near record levels, some economists
predict a downturn and possible recession in 1974. At the
same time, inflation continues to be a major problem,
despite the various measures that have been taken to
obtain price stability. Another important element in the
bargaining climate will be the size of deferred wage in­
creases scheduled for the upcoming year. These will be
discussed in a forthcoming article.2
In most major 1973 negotiations to date, labor
unions— perhaps because strikes have become increas­
ingly costly, perhaps because cost-of-living clauses cushion
the effects of inflation for many members, or perhaps be­
cause of stabilization policies— have exercised relative
restraint in their wage demands. 3 Major negotiations in
the trucking, West Coast longshoring, and electrical ma­
chinery industries have been concluded peacefully. 4
Since the major negotiations scheduled for 1974 will
involve a different grouping of industries and unions,
and may take place in a different economic context, it is
impossible to predict whether the 1973 pattern of rela­
tively modest union wage demands and peacefully con­
cluded agreements will continue into 1974. The bargain­
ing will involve a number of key industries, including
basic steel, aluminum and can, East and Gulf Coast long-




shoring, telephone, aerospace, and coal mining. In the
past, the negotiators in these industries have often failed
to reach agreement, with consequent strikes and occa­
sional invocation of the Taft-Hartley Act. The history and
bargaining patterns in these industries are briefly out­
lined in following sections.
Steel industry

One of the most important 1974 negotiations involves
the major steel producers and the United Steelworkers of
America. Contracts for 10 companies,5 covering an esti­
mated 350,000 workers, will expire August 1, 1974. The
companies bargain together as the Coordinating Commit­
tee Steel Companies.
Despite a history of peaceful steel settlements since
1960,6 steel users, mindful of earlier labor strife (includ­
ing a 116-day strike in 1959 ended by a Taft-Hartley in­
junction) have continued to stockpile steel in anticipation

Based on agreements on file with the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, exclusive o f those with railroads, airlines, and govern­
ment.
2 Deferred wage increases and other aspects of collective
bargaining in 1974 will be discussed by John L. Gurney of the
Bureau of Labor Statistics in the January issue.
3 An examination by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of 643
settlements covering 1,000 workers or more in private nonagricultural industry indicated first-year wage increases averaging 6.0
percent for the first 9 months of 1973, down from a 1972 aver­
age of 7.3 percent. The administration has set 5.5 percent as a
guideline for wage settlements (or 6.2 percent including non­
wage benefits).
This period o f labor peace was interrupted Sept. 15, 1973,
by a strike of 117,000 Chrysler workers. The company and the
United Automobile Workers reached tentative agreement 2 days
later, but the workers remained idle until after the agreement was
ratified Sept. 23. The settlement included a pension after 30 years
of service, regardless of the worker’s age, and concession on com­
pulsory overtime.
Allegheny Ludlum Industries, Inc., Armco Steel Corp.,
Bethlehem Steel Corp., Inland Steel Co., Jones and Laughlin
Steel Corp., National Steel Corp., Republic Steel Corp., United
States Steel Corp., Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corp., and Youngs­
town Sheet and Tube Co.
On at least one occasion, settlement was reached well in
advance of contract termination. The 1962 agreement was ratified
Mar. 31, 1962, to become effective July 1, 1962, following ex­
piration of the previous contract.

of a possible stoppage. Customer stockpiling has tended
to disrupt steel production in two ways: By requiring
overtime to meet the demand during negotiations; and
by causing layoffs following negotiations until customer
inventories reach levels low enough to prompt new orders.
In addition, steel users have imported quantities of steel
they might normally have ordered from domestic
producers.
To avoid these disruptions, company and union nego­
tiators agreed early in 1973 to a different bargaining
approach which they have termed the “ Experimental
Negotiating Agreement.” For the 1974 negotiations only,
workers are guaranteed minimum wage increases of 3 per­
cent in 1974, 1975, and 1976, although greater increases
can be negotiated. The cost-of-living clause negotiated in
1971 will continue, and national issues still unresolved as
of contract expiration will be settled by an impartial arbi­
tration panel. In addition, each worker employed as of
August 1, 1974, will receive a onetime bonus of $150
from the gains expected from avoiding stockpiling. A
right to strike or lockout over local plant issues is retained,
but such limited actions, should they occur, are not likely
to significantly disrupt steel production. The negotiators
have expressed hope that the Experimental Negotiating
Agreement will alleviate the layoff problem, which in the
past extended for several months for some workers, and
the growing import problem.7
Alum inum and can industries

Historically, the negotiations and final terms of basic
steel agreements have been influenced by earlier Steel­
worker settlements in the aluminum, can, and copper
industries. What effect steel’s new Experimental Negotiat­
ing Agreement may have on this pattern is not known.
The 1974 bargaining will involve two major can agree­
ments and three aluminum agreements, each covering
5,000 workers or more. Steelworker agreements expiring
in February with the American and Continental Can Cos.
cover about 30,000 workers, and Steelworker and Alumi­
num Workers of America agreements expiring in May with
the Aluminum Co. of America, Reynolds Metals Co., and
Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corp. cover about40,000.
Labor and management in the aluminum industry
have recently announced that they intend to move up
contract talks by more than 3 months to December
1973, in hope of completion early in 1974. If there is
no settlement by February 1, 1974, the parties will call
upon the president of the Steelworkers and the chief
executive officers of the companies to resolve dif­
ferences. Like steel’s Experimental Negotiating Agree­
ment, aluminum’s plan is designed to avoid stockpiling
and layoff disruptions.




In the 1971 round of negotiations, the wage increases,
improved pensions, new cost-of-living clause, and other
gains negotiated for the canworkers set the pattern for
the other industries in this group. Both the can and copper
settlements were reached only after serious strikes involv­
ing over 30,000 workers in each industry.8 The aluminum
settlement, achieved without disruption, generally fol­
lowed the can industry’s terms, but added a job classifica­
tion study estimated to result in an average upgrading
cost of 5 cents per worker.

Longshore industry

Although the longshore industry employs a smaller
number of workers than other major industries, bargain­
ing disputes may have far-ranging effects on domestic
and foreign trade. About 43,000 workers on the East and
Gulf Coast will be affected by collective bargaining agree­
ments expiring in September and October 1974. Four
major agreements negotiated by the International Long­
shoremen’s Association, each covering at least 5,000
workers in New York, New Orleans, Baltimore, and the
West Gulf ports, account for approximately three-fourths
of all longshoremen, including those on the West Coast.
Strikes in this industry have led Presidents to invoke
emergency procedures of the Taft-Hartley Act eight
times— more than in any other industry. All disputes
have been over contracts, but one in 1953 also involved a
rivalry between the International Longshoremen’s Associ­
ation (then Ind.) and the International Brotherhood of
Longshoremen (AFL), which was organized after the ILA
was expelled from the AFL on corruption charges. Vir­
tually all the Nation’s ports were shut down briefly in
October 1971, when East and Gulf Coast longshoremen
joined West Coast longshoremen, who had been on strike
since July. President Nixon then invoked the Taft-Hartley
injunction for the first time since assuming office. In the
1971 negotiations a primary issue was the union’s de­
mand that all ports receive a guaranteed annual income
similar to that in the New York port. At the end of nego­
tiations, the South Atlantic and Gulf Coast ports received
no guarantee. Following settlement, the Pay Board re­
duced first-year pay scales by 15 cents an hour.
The ILA has repeatedly and unsuccessfully asked for
a national contract with no local variations. Formerly,
each port conducted separate negotiations, but in 1957
the New York Shipping Association was empowered to
7

For additional information, see I. W. Abel, “ Basic steel’s
experimental negotiating agreement, “M onthly Labor Review,
September 1973, pp. 3 9 -4 2 .
Strike data for these industries are not available, as the
Bureau records strike statistics to the 3-digit Standard Industrial
Classification only.

bargain for ports from Maine to Virginia on wages, hours,
pension and welfare contributions, and the duration of
the contract; each port continued to negotiate all other
issues. In 1971, the Council of North Atlantic Shipping
Association was formed, representing all North Atlantic
Coast ports, 9 and now bargains with the ILA for a
master contract covering containerization, as well as
terms previously negotiated by the New York Shipping
Association.
Telephone industry

During the summer of 1974, virtually all of the 32
telephone industry agreements covering 5,000 workers or
more are scheduled to exprie— 2 in June, 25 in July, and
3 in August. The Communications Workers of America,
the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
(both AFL-CIO) and five independent telephone un­
ions 10 will be negotiating contracts for approximately
600,000 workers.
The Bell System accounts for nearly 90 percent of the
workers in the industry. In previous bargaining there has
been a recognizable pattern of settlement within the
System: One major subsidiary settles and the others
follow with little change in terms. Three nationwide
strikes— in 1947, 1968, and 1971— and numerous
smaller strikes have occurred in this industry. Opposition
to settlement terms of the last agreement resulted in a
lengthy strike in New York, but final terms were similar
to those of other agreements in the Bell System. The
emergency provisions of the Taft-Hartley Act were in­
voked only once— in 1948— to prevent a threatened
strike of long-lines telephone workers. Recent strikes have
had little effect on service owing to the high degree of
automation in the telephone industry.
Aerospace industry

company. A settlement pattern has been evident in the
industry for the past two decades: One company settles
first and the other companies negotiate similar agreements
with their respective unions.
This industry has been characterized by a long and
stormy history of strikes. In the past 20 years, most of
the 18 major stoppages (those involving 10,000 workers
or more) primarily were over noneconomic factors—
principally union security and job security. Only in the
strikes of 1968 and 1969 were economic factors the
primary issues. The Taft-Hartley injunction was invoked
twice in 1962 and once in 1963, 1966, and 1967.
After the last aerospace contracts were negotiated in
1971, the Pay Board rejected the terms of the first-year
wage increase. The contract called for an increase of 51
cents an hour, but only 34 cents was approved, with a
stipulation that the 17 cents be deferred until the second
year of the contract. The rollback cost the average union
member about $350. The Federal District Court and a
Special Federal Court of Appeals found the Pay Board
has erred. The case is now before the Cost of Living
Council.12
Coal industry

In 1974, for the first time, the major agreement in the
coal industry will be negotiated under the reform leader­
ship of Arnold R. Miller, recently elected president of the
United Mine Workers of America. The agreement, be­
tween the Mine Workers and the Bituminous Coal Opera­
tors’ Association,13 covers about 80,000 workers and is
scheduled for renegotiation in November 1974. The asso­
ciation claims to represent almost all soft coal producers
in the industry, and the Mine Workers claim over 90 per­
cent of all coalminers.
The Nation’s supply of coal comes largely from the
Appalachian area,14 which produces about 70 percent of
all soft coal. After a long period of decline, the coal in­
dustry is again beginning to grow— since 1961 annual

Three-fourths of the collective bargaining agreements
covering 5,000 workers or more in the aerospace industry
expire in 1974. The International Union of United Auto­
mobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers
of America (Auto Workers) and the International Associ­
ation of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (Machinists)
will meet with six major aerospace companies11 to nego­
tiate new contracts covering 107,000 workers. Employ­
ment in this industry has dropped considerably as Govern­
ment outlays have declined since 1969.

The six principal ports are New York, Baltimore, Philadel­
phia, Boston, Providence, and Hampton Roads (Va.).
10 Telephone Traffic Union (New York); Union of Telephone
Workers (New York); Federation of Telephone Workers of Penn­
sylvania; Federation of Women Telephone Workers of Southern
California; and Connecticut Union of Telephone Workers.
The companies are Bendix Corp., Boeing Co., Lockheed
Aircraft Corp., McDonnell Douglas Corp., Rockwell International
and United Aircraft Corp. Seattle Professional Engineering Emees Association also bargains with Boeing.

In 1959, the Auto Workers and Machinists established
a joint bargaining committee prior to contract negotia­
tions with the Boeing, Lockheed, McDonnell Douglas,
and Rockwell International companies. Since then, these
unions have usually adopted a series of common objec­
tives; however, each union negotiates separately with each

At the time of preparation of this article. In September,
the Council appointed a sepcial panel, which was expected to
make recommendations on the case by the middle o f Decem­
ber 1973.
13
Other associations and individual producers also endorsed
this agreement.
West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Kentucky (eastern), Ohio,
Virginia, Tennessee, Maryland, and Alabama.




9

production has increased steadily while the supplies, of
competitive fuels, especially gas and oil, are diminishing
and their cost is skyrocketing. Coal is the only plentiful
domestic resource available to bridge the gap between the
demand for energy and the supply of gas and oil.
Here again is an industry with a continuous history of
strikes. In the 1950’s the industry averaged 314 work
stoppages per year, involving a total of 136,000 workers;
in the 1960’s the average dropped to 184, involving
82,000 workers. In the middle 1960’s and in 1970 the
downward trend was reversed and reached the early




1950’s levels. The last strike, in 1971, was the longer
since 1949, when President Truman asked Congress for
special legislation to allow the Government to seize and
operate the mines. The Taft-Hartley Act has been invoked
twice, but not since 1948.
The table which follows lists key provisions of selected
collective bargaining agreements, each affecting 5,000
workers or more, in a wide range of industries, excluding
construction. These agreements were chosen as repre­
sentative of contract expirations or reopenings, deferred
wage increases, or cost-of-living reviews in 1974.

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.

Ordnance and accessories
Food
Textiles
ApDarel
Paper
Chemicals
Rubber
Leather
Stone, clay, and glass

10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.

Company or association 1

Steel and aluminum
Fabricated metal products
Machinery, except electrical
Electrical machinery
Motor vehicles
Aircraft
Shipbuilding
Railway cars and equipment

Union 2

18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.

Mining
Railroads
Local transit
Trucking and warehousing
Maritime
Airlines
Communications

Em­
ployees
covered

25.
26.
27.
28.

Electric and gas utilities
Finance, insurance, and
real estate
Amusement and recreation
Medical and other health
services

1974 provisions
for deferred
wage in c re a s e 5

C ontract term
and reopening
p ro v isio n s 3

1974 provisions for
auto m a tic cost-ofliv in g r e v ie w 4

Oct. 16, 1971, to
Oct. 15, 1974
Dec. 13, 1971, to
Oct. 1, 1974

Jan. 15, thereafter quarterly
(Apr., July, and Oct.)
Feb. 1, thereafter quarterly
(May and Aug.)

Sept. 3, 1973, to
Aug. 31, 1976
July 1, 1973, to
June 30, 1976
Sept. 3, 1973, to
Aug. 31, 1976
Sept. 3, 1973, to
Aug. 31, 1976
Feb. 1, 1972, to
Jan. 31,1974
Feb. 1, 1972, to
J a n .31, 1974

Jan. 1 and July 1 .

Sept. 2 : 20 cents

July 1____________

July 1: 20 to 35 cents

Jan. 1 and July 1 _

Sept. 2: 20 cents

Jan. 1 and July 1 .

Sept. 2: 20 cents

At anytime, when there is
a 2.5-percent rise in the
CPI over its level at the
date of the Jan. 1 in­
crease

Jan. 1: 5 percent

1. O R DNANCE AND ACCESSORIES
Ling-Temco-Vought, Inc., Vought Aeronautic Co.,
and Vought Missiles and Space Co. (Texas)
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. (California, Florida, and
Hawaii)

Auto Workers (In d .)_______________

6,050

Machinists________________________

7.000

2. FOOD
Armour & Co.6_________________________________

Meat Cutters______________________

7,500

California Processors, Inc. (Northern C alifornia)6.

Teamsters (In d .)__________________

56,550

Swift & Co.6____________________________________

Meat Cutters______________________

8,300

Wilson & Co., Inc.6_____________________________

Meat Cutters______________________

9,350

Pineapple Cos., plantation and factory agreement
(Hawaii)
Sugar Companies’ Negotiating Committee (Ha­
waii)

Longshoremen and Warehousemen
(Ind.)
Longshoremen and Warehousemen
(Ind.)

7.000
9.000

3. TE XTILE S
Textile Workers Union____________

6.000

Oct. 2, 1972, to
Oct. 5, 1974

Associated Corset and Brassiere Manufacturers,
Inc. (New York, N.Y.i

Ladies' Garment Workers__________

35.000

Jan. 1, 1972, to
Dec. 31, 1974

Clothing Manufacturers Association of United
States of America
Popular Priced Dress Manufacturing Group, Inc.;
Popular Priced Dress Contractors Association,
Inc.; United Better Dress Manufacturers Asso­
ciation, Inc.; National Dress Manufacturers
Association, Inc.; and Affiliated Dress Manu­
facturers, Inc.6

Clothing Workers__________________

125,000

Ladies’ Garment Workers__________

60.000

June 1, 1971, to
May 31, 1974
Jan. 3 0 ,1 9 7 3 ,to
Jan. 31, 1976

Textile Dye and Screen Print Cos_______________

4. APPAREL

Feb. 1: 6 percent

5. PAPER
West Coast Paper and Paper Converting Industry.

Printing Press men

6,000

June 16, 1972, to
June 16, 1976
REOPENING:
June 16

Steelworkers_____

5,100

Mar. 8, 1971, to
Mar. 11, 1974

Rubber W orkers...

10,500

May 31, 1973, to
Apr. 20, 1976
June 22, 1 9 7 3 ,to
Apr. 20, 1976
Apr. 26, 1973, to
Apr. 20, 1976
June 11, 1 97 3 ,to
Apr. 19, 1976

6. CHEMICALS
Dow Chemical Co. (Midland and Bay City, Mich.).

7. RUBBER
B. F. Goodrich Co______________________________
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.6___________________

Rubber W orkers...

19.000

Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co____________________

Rubber W orkers...

23,750

Uniroyal, Inc________ _____ ____________________

Rubber W orkers...

16.000




July 1: 28 cents
July 1: 28 cents
July 1: 28 cents
July 1:13 to 28 cents (ex­
cluding Naugatuck
Footwear plant)

8.

Boot and Shoe Workers; United Shoe
Workers

13,800

July 15, 1972, to
July 15,1974

Oct. 25, 1971, to
Oct. 25, 1974
Feb. 16, 1972, to
Feb. 16,1975

Glass and Ceramic Workers.

8,400

PPG Industries, Inc____________________________

Glass and Ceramic Workers.

5,500

10.

June 1: 6 cents

Feb. 1, thereafter quarterly
(May and Aug.)
Feb. 16, June 1, and quar­
terly (Sept, and Dec.)

F e b .1 6 :1 5 cents

STEEL AND A L U M IN U M

Aluminum Co. of America______________________

Aluminum Workers________________

11,000

Aluminum Co. of America______________________

Steelworkers______________________

10,000

Armco Steel Corp______________________________

Armco Employees Independent Fed­
eration, Inc. (Ind.)
Steelworkers______________________

6,000

Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corp___________

7,400

Kaiser Steel Corp. (Fontana, Calif.)_____________

Steelworkers______________________

6.500

Reynolds Metals Co____________________________

Steelworkers______________________

8.500

United States Steel Corp. (salaried em ployees)...

Steelworkers______________________

7.100

Crucible, Inc___________________________________

Steelworkers______________________

7.100

C F & I Steel Corp_____________________________

Steelworkers______________________

National Steel Corp., Weirton Steel Div. (Ohio
and West Virginia)
10 major basic steel companies:
Allegheny Ludlum Industries, Inc.
Armco Steel Corp.
Bethlehem Steel Corp.
Inland Steel Co.
Jones and Laughlin Steel Corp.
National Steel Corp., Great Lakes Steel
Div. (Michigan)
Republic Steel Corp.
United States Steel Corp.
Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co.
Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Co.
Western Electric Co., Inc. (Baltimore, M d .)______

Independent
(Ind.)

Steelworkers

Union

Steelworkers

Communication Equipment Workers,
Inc. (Ind.)

5,000
10,000

June 1, 1971, to
May 31, 1974
June 1, 1971, to
May 31, 1974
July 31, 1971, to
July 31, 1974
June 1, 1971, to
May 31, 1974
Aug. 1, 1971, to
Aug. 1, 1974
June 1, 1971, to
May 31, 1974
Aug. 1, 1971, to
Aug. 1, 1974
Aug. 1, 1971, to
Aug. 1, 1974
Aug. 1, 1971, to
Aug. 1, 1974
Aug. 18, 1971, to
Aug. 1, 1974

6350,000

Aug. 1, 1971, to
Aug. 1, 1974

5,400

Aug. 28, 1971, to
Aug. 27, 1974

Feb. 1 5 ,1 9 7 1 ,to
Feb. 14,1974
Feb. 15, 1 97 1 ,to
Feb. 14, 1974

Mar. 1____________________
Mar. 1______
Feb. 1 and May 1.

... ...

Mar. 1__________

_______

Feb. 1 and May 1.

_______

Feb. 1 and May 1

... ...

Feb. 1 and May 1 . . _______
Feb. 1 and May 1

..

..

Feb. 1 and May 1

..

...

Feb. 1 and May 1

Feb. 1 and May 1__________

FA B R IC A TED M E TAL PRO DUCTS

American Can Co_______________________________

Steelworkers.

15,000

Continental Can Co_____________________________

Steelworkers

16,500

12.

1974 provisions
for deferred
w age increase 5

1974 provisions for
a utom atic cos t-o fliv in g r e v ie w 4

STONE, CLAY, A N D GLASS

Libbey-Owens-Ford Co________________________

11.

C ontract term
and reopening
p ro v isio n s 3

LEATHER

Brown Shoe Co________________________________

9.

Em­
ployees
covered

Union 2

Company or association 1

M A C H IN E R Y , EXCEPT E LECTRICAL
6,300

Briggs and Stratton (Milwaukee, W is.)__________

Allied Industrial Workers____

J. I. Case Co___________________________________

Auto Workers (In d .)_________

5,050

National Cash Register Co. (Dayton, Ohio)_______

Auto Workers (In d .)_________

8,000

Timken Co. (Columbus and Wooster, Ohio)______

Steelworkers________________

8,150

General Electric Co.6____________________________

Electrical Workers (IU E )_____

90.000

General Electric Co.6______________ _____ _______

Electrical Workers (UE) (Ind.)

17.000

RCA Corp., master agreement__________________

Electrical Workers (IU E )_____

12,200

Western Electric Co., Inc. (Massachusetts and
North Carolina)

Communications Workers____

11,800

13.

Aug. 1, 1971, to
July 31, 1974
July 31, 1971, to
June 30, 1974
Jan. 31, 1972, to
Mar. 31, 1975
Nov. 13, 1971, to
Aug. 25, 1974

Mar. and J u n e .....................
Jan., thereafter quarterly
(Apr., July, and Oct.)
Mar. 3 and June 6

Feb. 4: 10 to 21 cents

E LECTRICAL M A C H IN E R Y




May 28, 1973, to
June 27, 1976
May 28, 1973, to
June 27, 1976
Aug. 10, 1970, to
May 31, 1974
July 18, 1971, to
July 17, 1974

Nov. 2 5 ___________________

May 27: 16 cents

Nov. 2 5 ______ _____________

May 2 7 :1 6 cents

Union 2

Employees
covered {

Western Electric Co., Inc. (Oklahoma)___________

Electrical Workers (IB E W )_________

5,350

Western Electric Co., Inc. (New Jersey, Ohio,
Indiana, Illinois, and Nebraska)
Westinghouse Electric Corp.6____________________

Electrical Workers (IB E W )_________

Westinghouse Electric Corp.*____________________

Electrical Workers (UE) (In d .)______

Westinghouse Electric Corp.*____________________

Federation of Westinghouse Salaried
Unions (Ind.)

Company or association 1

C ontract term
and reopening
provisions 3

1974 provisions for
auto m a tic cos t-o flivin g re v ie w 4

1974 provisions
fo r d e ferred
w age increase 5

13. E LECTRICAL M A C H IN E R Y -C o n tin u e d

14.

Aug. 3, 1971, to
Aug. 2, 1974
45,850
July 18, 1971, to
July 17, 1974
36,000
June 11, 1973, to
July 12, 1976
8,300 I June 11, 1973, to
I
July 12, 1976
15,000 i June 11, 1 9 7 3 ,to
I
July 12, 1976

Electrical Workers (IU E )___________

June 10: 16 cents

Dec. 9 ____________________

June 10: 16 cents

Dec. 9 ____________________

June 10: 16 cents

MO TOR VEHICLES

American Motors (Kenosha and Milwaukee, Wis.)_

Auto Workers

Chrysler Corp.6_________________________________

Auto Workers

Ford Motor Co.6 7_______________________________

Auto Workers

15.

j

l

j Oct. 16, 1970, to
Sept. 15, 1974
(In d .)_______________ 1 110,200 j Sept. 17, 1973, to
Sept. 14, 1976
(In d .)____
.. !
185,000 j Oct. 31, 1973, to
Sept. 14, 1976
(In d .)_______________

9,600

Bendix Corp______________________ _____________

Auto Workers (Ind.)

10,200

Auto Workers (Ind.)

7,000

Boeing Co. (Washington, Kansas, and F lo rid a )...

Machinists________

20.500

Lockheed Aircraft Corp_________________________

Machinists________

24,550

McDonnell Douglas Corp. (Long Beach, C alif.)___

Auto Workers (Ind.)

14,800

Rockwell International_________________________

Auto Workers (Ind.)

10,600

United Aircraft Corp., Pratt Whitney Aircraft Div.
(Connecticut)

Machinists________

11.500

i

16.

Mar. 1 and June 1
Mar., thereafter quarterly
(June, Sept., and Dec.)
Quarterly_________________

Sept.: 3 percent
Sept. 23: 11.5 to 24
cents

A IR C R A F T

Boeing Co., Vertol Div. (Pennsylvania)__________

Apr. 17, 1971, to
Apr. 15, 1974
Dec. 20, 1971, to
Sept. 30,1974
Dec. 13, 1971, to
Oct. 1, 1974
Dec. 13, 1971, to
Oct. 1, 1974
Dec. 6, 1971, to
Sept. 15, 1974
Dec. 5, 1971, to
Oct. 1, 1974
Dec. 1, 1971, to
Nov. 30, 1974

Feb. 1, thereafter quarterly
(May and Aug.)
Jan. 21, thereafter quarterly
(Apr. and July)
Jan. 20, thereafter quarterly
(Apr. and July)

S H IP B U IL D IN G

General Dynamics Corp. (Quincy, Mass.)________

Marine and Shipbuilding W o rk e rs ...

Litton Systems, Inc. (Pascagoula, Miss.)________

Metal Trades Council; Teamsters
(Ind.)
Peninsula Shipbuilders’ Association
(Ind.)
Metal Trades Council; Teamsters
(Ind.)

Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co.
(Newport News, Va.)
Pacific Coast Shipbuilding and Ship Repair Firms
(Pacific Coast)
17.

Dec. 9 _____ _______________

5,200
5,000
19.000
15.000

Mar. 16, 1969, to
Mar. 16, 1974
Nov. 1, 1971, to
Nov. 17, 1974
July 1, 1972, to
June 30, 1975
July 1, 1971, to
June 29, L974

July 6: 5.5 percent

RAILW AY CARS A N D E Q U IP M E N T

Pullman Inc., Pullman-Standard Div____________

18.

Oct. 1, 1971, to
Oct. 1, 1974

80,000

Nov. 12, 1971, to
Nov. 12, 1974

Jan. 1, thereafter quarterly
(Apr. and July)

Mine Workers

(Ind.)

RAILROADS *

Class I railroads:
Operating unions___________________________
Nonoperating unions:
Shop craft___ ____ _______________________
Nonshop craft___________________________

20.

5,150

M IN IN G

Bituminous Coal Operators Association__________

19.

Steelworkers

Locomotive Engineers (In d .)..............
United Transportation Union________
Carmen_________________
Firemen and Oilers______
Electrical Workers (IBEW)
Maintenance of Way_____
Railway Clerks___________
Railway Signalmen_______
Y ard m a s te rs ...................

35,000
135,000
45.000
14,600

12.000

July 1, 1973, to
Dec. 31, 1974

Jan. 1: 4 percent

60,000
125,000
10,000

5,500

LOCAL T R A N S IT

Amalgamated Transit Union
Greyhound Lines, Inc., Central, Northern, and
Southern States
j




12,000

Nov. 1, 1971, to
Oct. 31, 1974

Feb. 1, thereafter quarterly
(May and Aug.)

Company or association 1

Union 2

Employees
covered

C ontract term
and reopening
p ro v isio n s 3

300.000

[Ju ly 1, 1973, to
i
Mar. 31,1976

1974 provisions for
auto m a tic cost-ofliv in g re v ie w 4

1974 provisions
fo r d e ferred
w age increase 5

21. T R U C K IN G AND W A R E H O U S IN G 6
National master freight agreement and supple­
ments:
Local cartage______________________________
O v e r-th e -ro a d .._____ _____________________

Teamsters (Ind.)
Teamsters (Ind.)

100.000

July 1

July 1: 30 cents

22. M A R IT IM E
Dry cargo and tanlers agreements (Atlantic and
Gulf Coasts)
Dry cargo and tankers agreements (Atlantic and
Gulf Coasts)

M aritim e________

13.000

Marine Engineers.

16.000

New Orleans Steamship Association (New Or­
leans, La.)
New York Shipping Association (New Y ork)____

Longshoremen’s Association.

5.000

Longshoremen’s Association

21,200

Standard tanker and freightship agreements
(Atlantic, Gulf, Lakes, and Inland Waters Dis­
tricts)
Steamship Trade Association of Baltimore, Inc.
(Baltimore, Md.)
West Gulf Maritime Association, Inc. (Louisiana
and Texas)

Seafarers_________________

21,000

Longshoremen’s Association

5.000

Longshoremen’s Association

12,000

June 16, 1972, to
June 15, 1975
June 16, 1972, to
June 15, 1975
REOPENING:
June 16, in lieu
of deferred
wage increase.
Union shall
have the right
on 60 days'
written notice.
Mar. 13, 1972, to
Sept. 30, 1974
Nov. 14, 1971, to
Sept. 30, 1974
June 16, 1972, to
June 15, 1975

June 16: $22.58 to $46.65
a month
June 16: $7.44 a day

June 16: $22.63 to $45.09
a month

Nov. 14, 1971, to
Sept. 30, 1974
Oct. 1, 1971, to
Sept. 30, 1974

23. A IR L IN E S 6
Pan American World Airways, Inc. (supply clerks).

Teamsters (In d .)__________

8.000

United Airlines, Inc. (pilots)____________________

Airline Pilots______________

6,000

United Airlines, Inc. (stewardesses)_____________

Airline Pilots______________

5,500

July 1, 1972, to
Sept. 30, 1974
May 31, 1972, to
June 1, 1974
July 1, 1972, to
Sept. 31, 1974

24. C O M M U N IC A TIO N S
American Telephone and Telegraph Co., Long Communications Workers__________
Lines Dept.
Bell Telephone Co. of Pennsylvania (Pennsyl­ Federation of Telephone Workers of
Pennsylvania (Ind.)
vania)
Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Co. (Wash­ Communications Workers__________
ington, D. C., Maryland, Virginia, and West
Virginia)
Illinois Bell Telephone Co. (Illinois and Indiana). Electrical Workers (IBEW).

26,000
12,000
31,150

15,000

Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co___

Communications Workers

18,950

New England Telephone and Telegraph Co. (New
England Region)
New England Telephone Co. (New England
Region)
New Jersey Bell Telephone Co., Plant and En­
gineering Depts. (New Jersey)
New York Telephone Co., Traffic Department
(New York and Connecticut)
New York Telephone Co. and Empire City Subway
Co. (Limited) (New York)
Northwestern Bell Telephone Co________________

Electrical Workers (IB E W )____

16,000

Electrical Workers (IB E W )____

12.500

Electrical Workers (IB E W )____

10,650

Ohio Bell Telephone Co. (Ohio)_________________
Pacific Northwest Bell Telephone Co____________

Communications Workers____

12.500

Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co. and Bell of
Nevada
South Central Bell Telephone Co_______________

Communications Workers____

47,700

Communications W orkers____

38,400

Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co......... .

Communications Workers____

47,900

Telephone Traffic Union (Ind.)

19.750

Communications W orkers____

38,600

Communications Workers____

20,740

Communications Workers____

20,450

Southern New England Telephone Co. (Connec- I Connecticut Union of
ticut)
I
Workers, Inc. (Ind.)




Telephone

10.750

July 18, 1971, to
July 17,1974
July 28, 1971, to
July 28, 1974
July 18, 1971, to
July 17,1974
Aug. 1, 1971, to
July 31, 1974
July 18, 1971, to
July 17,1974
Sept. 26, 1971, to
July 29, 1974
Sept. 26, 1971, to
July 29,1974
May 29, 1971, to
July 20, 1974
Oct. 15, 1971, to
Aug. 15, 1974
July 18, 1971, to
July 17,1974
July 18, 1971, to
July 17, 1974
July 18,1971, to
July 17,1974
July 1 8 ,1 9 7 1 ,to
July 17, 1974
| July 18,1971, to
July 17,1974
July 18, 1971, to
j
July 17, 1974
| July 18, 197 1 ,to
July 17, 1974
| July 18, 197 1 ,to
July 17, 1974

July: 2 percent

Com pany or association 1

24.

Union 2

Em­
ployees
covered

Southwestern Bell Telephone Co_______

Communications Workers.

57.400

Communications Workers.

14,500

Western Electric Co., Inc., (installation).

Communications Workers.

30.400

Utility W orkers..................... ..................

5,400

Pacific Lighting Service Co., and Southern Cali­
fornia Gas Co. (California)
Southern California Edison Co. (California)............

Utility Workers; Chemical Workers..

7,500

Electrical Workers (IBEW )___............

6,200

July 1 8 ,1 9 7 1 ,to
July 17,1974
Aug. 5,1 9 71 , to
Aug. 14,1974
July 18,1971, to
July 17,1974

Sept. 1 ,1971, to
Aug. 31, 1974
Apr. 1,1971, to
Mar. 31, 1974
Jan. 1,1973, to
Dec. 31,1975
REO PEN IN G :In
event guide­
lines are elim ­
inated or raised
1 percent or
more prior to
Nov. 1.

Feb. 4 and June 3.

Jan. 1: in event increase
in cost of living exceeds
wage increase of prior
year

Service Employees

13,000

Jan. 1,1972, to
Dec. 31, 1974

Association of Motion Pictures:
Theatrical agreement...............

Actors____ ______

23.000

Television agreement..............

Actors................... .

23.000

Producers basic agreem ent..

Stage Employees.

18,200

Musicians_______

8,000

July 1,1971, to
June 30, 1974
July 1,1971, to
June 30,1974
Feb. 1,1969, to
Jan. 31, 1974
Aug. 1, 1972, to
Apr. 3 0,1974

Jan. 1 :2 5 cents

AM U S EM E N T A N D RECR EA TIO N

Television videotape agreement.

28.

Jan. 1: 6 percent

FIN A N C E , IN S U R A N C E , AND
REAL ESTATE

Realty Advisory Board on Labor Relations, Inc.
(New York)

27.

1974 provisions
fo r d e ferre d
w age increase *

ELECTRIC A N D GAS U T IL IT IE S

Consumer Power Co. (Michigan)..

26.

1974 provisions fo r
a u to m a tic c o s t-o fliv in g r e v ie w 4

C O M M U N IC A T IO N S — Continued

Western Electric Co., Inc., (distribution).

25.

C ontract term
and reopenin g
p ro v is io n s 3

M E D IC A L A N D O THER H E ALTH SERVICES

League of Voluntary Hospitals and Homes of
New York (New York, N.Y.)

Retail, Wholesale and Department
Store

1 Geographical coverage of contracts is interstate unless specified.
2 Unions are affiliated with AFL-CIO , except where noted as independent (Ind.).
3 Contract term refers to the date the contract is to go into effect, not the date of
signing. Where a contract has been amended or modified and the original termination
date extended, the effective date of the changes becomes the new effective date of the
agreement.
For purposes of this listing, the expiration is the formal termination date established
by the agreement. In general, it is the earliest date on which termination of the contract
could be effective, except for special provisions for termination as in the case of dis­
agreement arising out of wage reopening. Many agreements provide for automatic
renewal at the expiration date unless notice of termination is given. The Labor Manage­
ment Relations Act of 1947 requires that a party to an agreement desiring to terminate




36,000

July 1, 1972, to
June 30,1974

or modify it shall serve written notice upon the other party 60 days prior to the expira­
tion date.
4
Date shown indicates the month in which adjustment is to be made, not the month
of the Consumer Price Index on which adjustment is based.
* Hourly rate increase unless otherwise specified.
6 Contract terms are not on file with the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Information is
based on newspaper accounts.
7 The Ford Agreement was subject to ratification and the General Motors agreement
had not been concluded by Nov. 14,1973.
SOURCE: Contracts on file with the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Oct. 1, 1973. Where
no contracts are on file, table entries are based on newspaper accounts.

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

LOCATION1

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES2
SIC

STATE

UNION

UNIT

January
375
4046
502
1643
7915
7953
6304
1130
247
4428
3666
3233
2632
3701
4014
1690
6802
6816
2130
5718
286
6732
262
280
6745
2335
4024
4025
6508
6507
4035
4172
6084
507
508
1616
17
1652
1668
300

31
01
01
01
01
01
01
Cl
01
01
Cl
01
01
01
01
01
01
Cl
01
01
01
Cl
01
01
01
01
01
01
01
01
01
01
01
01
01
01
01
01
01
01

A M H O M E F O O D S INC L U 38
A M M O T O R S C O R P J E E P U N I T T O L E O O L U 12
AM T O B A C C O CO LUS 182 183 A N D 192
A M E R I C A N C Y A N A M I D CO L E O E R L E LAB S DIV LU 143
ASSN OF M O T I O N PICTURE ♦ TV PROD U C E R S BASIC
ASSOC GUARD ♦ PATROL AGENCIES CHICAGO
A S S O C P R O D U C E D E A L E R S ♦ B R O K E R S O F L A INC
B A S I C - W I T Z F U R N I T U R E I N D U S T R I E S INC 2 L U S
B E E C H N U T INC C A N A J Q H A R I E ♦ FT P L A I N P L A N T S
B U L O V A W A T C H C O I NC
B U N K E R RAM O C ORP 3 A M P H E N O L D I V I S I O N S 1031
CATERPILLAR TRACTOR CO JOLIET
CENTRAL FOUNORY CO HOLT
C H A M P I O N SPARK PLUG CO
D A N A C O R P S P I C E R A X L E D I V FT W A Y N E P L A N T
D U P O N T El D E N E M O U R S ♦ C O T E X T I L E F I B E R S D E P T
F I R S T N A T L S T O R E S INC B O S T O N LU 592
F I R S T N A T L S T O R E S INC N A T I C K L 2
F R O L I C F O O T W E A R INC J O N E S B O R O LU 7 28
G E N L T E L E P H O N E CO OF W I S C O N S I N
I-A B A K E R I E S GR NY LU 3
I - A I N D E P M E A T M A R K E T S S T L O U I S L U 88
I-A P I N E A P P L E C O M P A N I E S F A C T O R Y ♦ P L A N T A T I O N S
I - A R E T A I L W H O L E S A L E A G M T N Y C L U 51
JEWEL C O S INC JEWEL F O O D S T O R E S DIV
JOHNS MANVILLE PRODS CORP MANVILLE FINDERNE
KELSEY HAYES CO DETROIT AND ROMULUS PLANTS
K E L S E Y H A Y E S CO PL A N T S 1 2 3
J A CKSON LU 670
M A C Y R H ♦ C O INC M A C Y ' S N E W Y O R K L U 1 - S
M A C Y R H + C O I N C B A M B E R G E R S D I V L U 21
M O T O R WHE E L C ORP L A N S I N G LU 182
NEWPORT NEWS SHIPBUILDING ♦ DRY DOCK CO
NORTHERN ILLINOIS GAS COMPANY
P H I L I P M O R R I S U S A L O U I S V I L L E L U 16
PHILIP M ORRIS USA R I C H M O N D 203
PPG I N D USTRIES C H E M I C A L OIV LU 1
R E M I N G T O N A RMS C O INC ILI O N
R E V L O N I N C O R P O R A T E D LU 65
S T E R L I N G O R U G INC W I N T H R O P L A B O R A T O R I E S L U 61
S U G A R C O S N E G O T I A T I N G C O M M I T T E E LU 142

T o ta l:

1*450
3,000
4,200
1,400
18,200
4,000
1,500
1,050
1,050
2,050
1,900
4,500
1,050
3,850
1,800
2,200
2,400
1,800
1,050
1,500
4,000
2,400
7,000
1,500
8,000
2,000
2,700
1,400
9,000
2,000
2,150
2,500
1,550
2,400
3,200
1,400
1,750
1,500
1,300
9,000

20
37
21
28
78
73
50
25
20
38
36
35
33
36
37
28
54
54
31
48
23
54
20
20
54
32
37
37
53
53
37
37
49
21
21
28
19
28
28
20

23
31
50
21
93
33
93
54
21
21
33
33
63
00
32
62
14
14
71
35
20
40
95
21
30
22
34
34
21
22
34
54
33
61
54
31
21
22
21
95

155
553
203
121
192
118
531
119
108
500
127
218
161
553
107
500
155
155
188
346
108
155
480
108
500
231
553
107
332
184
107
500
127
203
203
500
500
423
121
480

1
1
4
1
2
2
2
1
4
4
4
1
1
4
1
1
4
4
1
4
3
3
3
3
4
4
4
4
4
4
1
1
4
1
4
1
1
4
1
2

40 a g r e e m e n t s ................. . 126, 700
F ebruary

2900
8659
6500
3324
2588
2903
2969
2983
1672
1692
5206
3703
2636
3270
2334
297
7110
6766
6771
5027
506
7112
7944
2905
4036
1691
380
34
6525
3777
6759
382

02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02
02




AM CAN CO
A S S O C G E N L C O N T R S O F NJ L U 4 7 2 AND 172
BLOOMINGDALE BROS NYC LU 3
BURROUGHS CORPORATION LU 1313
C I T I E S S E RVICE CO C O P P E R H I L L O P E R A T I O N S L 401
CONT CAN CO MASTER A GMT3
C R O W N C O R K ♦ S E A L C O INC
O I E B O L D INC C A N T O N L U 1191
DU P O N T E 1 DE N E M O U R S ♦ C O C L I N T O N
OU PONT E I OE N E M O U R S ♦ C O C L E R D E E P W A T E R
EASTERN CEMENT HAULERS ASSN
E L T R A C O R P N A T L AGMT
E N G E L H A R D MINE R A L S + C H E M I C A L S CORP LU 1668
FEDERAL-MOGUL CORP BOWER ROLLER BEARING DIV
G A R L O C K INC M E C H R U B B E R D I V L U 588 D I S T 6
I - A B E E T S U G A R C O S 4 10 L U S
I-A H O T E L + R E S T A U R A N T I N D U S T R Y LUS 68 1 ♦ 68 6
I-A M I L W A U K E E A R E A R E T A I L M E A T I N D U S T R Y
I-A PHI LA F O O D S T O R E S
I-A T A X I C A B C O M P A N I E S C L E V E
LOEWS CORP LORILLARD OIV GREENSBORO LU 317
LONG BEACH ♦ ORANGE COUNTY RESTAURANT ASSN
M E T R O P G A R A G E BD OF T R A O E INC 5 NYC LU 272
N A T L C A N C O R P MD ILL O H I O NY ♦ C A L I F
NORTH AMERICAN ROCKWELL COMMERCIAL PRODS
P PG I N D U S T R I E S INC C H E M I C A L D I V LU 45
S E A B R O O K F A R M S INC L U 56
S P E R R Y R A N O C O R P L O U I S I A N A A R M Y A M M U N I T I O N PL
S P I E G E L INC MA I L O R D E R DIV L O C A L 743
SQUARE D CO LEXINGTON LU 2220
ST P A U L F O O D R E T A I L E R S A S S N O F GRT R S T PA U L
STOK E L Y VAN CAM P INC F A I R M O N T AND W I N N E B A G O

15,000
5,000
4,500
2,300
1,500
15,000
1,250
1,350
1,150
4,100
2,500
6,700
1,100
1,600
1,200
2,900
5,500
1,500
3,900
1,250
2,300
5,000
3,000
3,000
6,000
1,000
1,200
1,650
4,500
1,100
1,400
1,900

34
16
53
35
33
34
34
34
28
28
42
36
33
35
32
20
58
54
54
41
21
58
75
34
37
28
20
19
53
36
54
20

00
22
21
34
62
00
00
31
42
22
00
00
22
34
21
93
93
35
00
31
56
93
21
00
00
55
22
72
33
61
41
41

335
143
332
553
121
335
335
112
500
500
531
553
553
553
218
126
145
155
155
531
203
145
531
335
553
121
155
121
531
127
184
531

4
2
4
4
1
4
4
1
1
1
2
4
4
1
1
3
3
3
3
3
1
2
2
4
4
1
1
1
4
1
2
4

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

LOCATION1

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES2
SIC

STATE

UNION

UNIT

F e b ru a ry —C o n tin u e d
6760
3726
5C22
2548
8859
3778

02
02
C2
02
02
€2

STOP + S H O P INC 8 L US
TAPPAN CO MANSFIELD
TRANS P O R T OF N J 8 LUS
U N I O N C A R B I D E C O R P F E R R O A L L O Y S D IV LU 3-8 9
U T I L I T Y C O N T R S A S S N OF NJ L US 4 7 2 A N D 172
W H I R L P O O L C O R P O R A T I O N E V A N S V I L L E LU 808

T o ta l:

7,800
1 , 000
3,450
1,000
1,000
7,500

54
36
41
33
16
36

10
31
22
55
22
32

184
500
197
357
143
347

4
1
4
1
2
4

16
16
16
16
16
15
54
34
32
28
28
15
15
37
32
21
21
33
34

21
21
21
21
21
74
91
00
43
91
62
40
40
32
00
50
61
32
93
22
00
00
16
23
00
35
91
93
93
50
34
34
21
21
31
42
21
14
14
90
93
00
93
93
63
40
40
40
40
23
31
34
34
41
41
20
72
54
00
00
34
00
32
56
23

531
119
129
115
143
119
184
218
135
100
202
531
143
553
135
203
203
335
218
155
335
500
129
129
218
218
531
531
531
600
553
335
243
127
553
553
500
320
320
127
346
135
135
327
553
143
129
531
600
155
127
531

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
4
1
4
2
2
1
4
4
1
1
2
1
4
4
2
2
1
4
2
2
1
2
1
4
2
2
4
1
2
1
1
4
4
4
4
2
1
2
2
2
2
1
4
1
3
3
3
3
4
1
4
4
1
4
1
1
1

38 a g r e e m e n t s ................. . . 133, 100

M arch
8709
8710
8711
8716
8470
8616
6715
2902
2358
1608
1626
8435
8624
4005
2364
512
503
2635
2926
255
3204
6056
8593
8840
2904
3614
349
228
365
376
4126
1630
1428
6308
4158
3373
2117
4144
4165
5770
5721
2355
2359
6322
4077
8495
8496
8878
8876
259
3296
6539
315
6735
6738
5217
2357
364
2356
1102
6821
1649
1650
504
625

03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
C3
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03




A G C N Y S T A T E C H P T R I N C 11 L O C A L S
A G C O F A M N Y S T A T E C H P T R 46 LUS
AGC OF AM N Y S T A T E C H P T R 4 LUS
AGC OF AM NY S T A T E C H A P INC H V Y ♦ H W Y C O N S T R
A G C OF AM NY S T A T E C H P T R INC 19 LUS
A G C O F A M S A N A N T O N I O C H P T R L U 14
A L L I E D E M P L O Y E R S INC K I N G S N O H O M I S H C O U N T I E S
AMERICAN CAN COMPANY
ANCHOR HOCKING CORP P ♦ M DEPT
A T L A N T I C R I C H F I E L D H A N F O R D CO
B E A U N I T CORP F I B E R S D IV 2 PL T S LU 2 207
B L D R S AS S N OF K A N S A S C ITY LU 541
B L D R S A S S N OF K A N S A S C I T Y MO A N D K A N S
BORG WARNER CORP WARNER GEAR DIV MUNCIE 287
B R O C K W A Y GLASS CO INC P ♦ M A T L A N T I C CITY
BROWN AND WILLIAMSON TOBACCO CORP
BROWN AND W ILLIAMSON TOBACCO CORP LOUISVILLE
CABOT CORP STELLITE DIV KOKOMO
CALIF METAL TRADES ASSN
C A M P B E L L SOUP CO C A M D E N LU P-80
CARRIER CORPORATION ELLIOTT CO
CINN GAS AND ELEC CO AND SUBS
CONN CONSTR INDUS
A S S N INC LU 4 7 8
CONSTRUCTORS ASSN OF WESTERN PENN
C O N T C A N CO INC
CUTL E R HAMM E R INDUS SYSTEMS SPEC PRODS OIVS
DAIRY EMPLRS LABOR COUNCIL MASTER ♦ SUPPS
D A I R Y I N D U S T R Y IND R EL A S S N SO C A L I F DAI R Y
DAIRY INDUSTRY INOUS RELS ASSN MASTER OFF
O E L M A R V A P O U L T R Y P R O C E S S O R S ASS N MD ♦ DEL
D I A M O N D R E O T R U C K S INC L U 6 5 0
D OW C H E M I C A L CO M I D L A N D DIV LU 12075
E D I T I O N B O O K B I N D E R S O F NY INC L U 25
E L E C T R I C A L W H O L E S A L E R S IND W H S E F I R M S LU 3
EX C E L L O C O R P L I M A L U 1 2 1 1
FMC COR P L I N K - B E L T S P E E D E R D CEDAR R A PIDS
F U L T O N C N T Y G L O V E MFRS INC ♦ B L O C K CUT MFRS
GENL DYNAMICS CORP ELEC BOAT DIV QUINCY
GENL DYNAMICS CORP ELEC BOAT DIV OUINCY
G E N L T E L E C O O F T H E N O R T H W E S T INC L U 89
GENL TELEPHONE CO OF CALIF
GLASS CONTAINERS CORP AMD ♦ P+M DEPTS
GLASS CONTAINERS CORP AMD-P ♦ M DEPTS WESTERN
GROWER SHIPPER VEGETABLE ASSN CENTRAL CALIF
H A Y E S I N T E R N A T I O N A L C O R P LU 1155
H E A V Y C O N S T R U C T O R S A S S N OF G R E A T E R K A N S A S
HEAVY C O N S T R U C T O R S ASSN OF GREA T E R KANSAS
HEAVY C O N S T R U C T O R S ASSN OF GREA T E R K ANSAS CTY
H E A V Y C O N T R S A S S N INC N E B R A S K A ♦ IOWA
HEINZ H J CO HEINZ USA DIV LU 325 P ITTSBURGH
HOOVER CO NO CANTON ♦ CANTON LU 1985
H U O S O N JL C O O E T R O I T L U 2 9 9
I— A D E T R O I T B R E W E R I E S D E T R O I T 2 L U S
I-A F O O D M A R K E T A G M T OF M N P L S L U 6 5 3 A
I-A ME A T M A R K E T A G M T OF M N P L S L U 6 5 3
I-A M O V I N G A ND S T O R A G E IND LU 814
INDIAN H E A D INC P ♦ M N E W O R L E A N S 6 LUS
ITT C O N T I N E N T A L B A K I N G C O L U 29
K R A F T C O C O R P M E T R O G L A S S D P A NJ ♦ ILL 5 L U S
K R O E H L E R M F G C O 11 L U S
K ROGER CO D E T R O I T B R A N C H LU 876
LEVER BROTHERS CO MASTER INTERSTATE
LEVER BROTHERS CO HAMMONO 7-336
L I G G E T T A N O M Y E R S INC O U R H A M LU 176
MAGEE CARPET CO BLOOMSBURG

2,000
2,000
1,000
1,950
15,300
1,000
3,800
3,200
4,900
1,050
2,800
1,650
3,000
2,900
4,900
3,400
4,350
1,300
3,500
2,550
1,400
1,150
2,500
5,000
2,700
1,500
1,600
7,000
7,500
1,000
1,200
5*100
1,950
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,050
5,200
1,000
2 ,600
14,500
3,950
4,550
1,100
2,800
2,000
1,400
2,500
3,000
2,300
3,000
1,200
1,100
4,500
1,000
3,500
2.250
1.200
1.500
2*700
2,500
3,100
1,200
2.200
1,150

20
35
49
15
16
34
36
20
20
20
20
37
28
27
50
37
35
31
37
37
48
48
32
32
50
37
16
16
16
16
20
35
53
20
54
54
42
32
20
32
25
54
28
28
21
22

531
155
155
531
135
531
135
205
184
121
357
203
337

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AN0

LOCATION1

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES2
SIC

STATE

UNION

UNIT

17
15
41
20
19
35
32
32
32
49
20
27
49
49
54
32
33
73
54
49
35
27
34
26
26
37
49
38

85
34
35
93
35
33
00
90
00
93
23
21
91
86
10
64
92
00
34
00
91
53
91
93
90
31
35
21

170
143
197
531
101
218
135
135
135
100
108

527
553
704
305

2
2
1
2
1
1
4
4
1
4
1
2
1
2
4
4
2
4
2
4
2
1
2
2
4
1
4
1

15
15
15
15
17
17
15
15
15
15
15
15
17
15
54
54
37
34
89
15
15
17
70
20
37
17
17
35
26
27
35
37
49
36
16
26
15
16
16
16
30
30
58
38

59
62
62
50
72
72
00
59
72
34
00
72
14
62
91
91
14
22
62
43
43
43
22
33
00
21
93
93
35
33
34
34
31
74
16
35
93
23
23
23
56
31
93
23

119
143
600
119
143
119
119
143
143
129
143
600
115
119
155
531
347
553
100
531
143
119
145
531
553
115
115
218
100
243
107
107
342
347
531
100
143
119
143
129
333
333
145
500

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
2
2
2
2
2
4
2
2
1
4
2
1
4
4
1
2
4
2
2
2
2
1
1
2
4

M a r c h —C o n tin u e d
8669
8742
5015
224
29
33C6
2363
2362
2361
6050
305
1422
6029
6087
6761
2360
2549
7905
6826
6079
3305
1451
2966
1291
1021
4045
6041
4427

03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
C3
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03

M E C H A N I C A L C O N T R S A S S N OF N EW M E X I C O INC
MICH DISTRIBUTION CONTRS ASSN
MILW A U K E E + SUBU R B A N TRANS P O R T C0RP LU 998
NO CAL I F D AIRY ASSN 6 LUS
OLIN CORP ENERGY SYSTEMS DIV BARABOO
OUTBOARD MARINE CORP GALE PRODUCTS DIV LU1659
O W E N S - I L L I N O I S INC P ♦ M DE P T
O W E N S - I L L I N O I S INC P
M DEPT SAN FRANCISCO
O W E N S - I L L I N O I S INC F O R M I N G D E P T MIAMI B E A C H
P A C I F I C L I G H T I N G S E R V I C E CO A N D C A L I F GAS CO
PET INC W H I T M A N C H O C O L A T E S D I V P H I L A D E L P H I A
P R I N T I N G I N D U S O F M E T R O N Y I N C L U 51
P U G E T S O U N D P O W E R + L I G H T C O B E L L E V U E L U 77
SALT RIVER PROJECT AGRICUL IMPROVEMT POWER
S T O P ♦ S H O P C O S INC 5 L U S
T H A T C H E R G LASS MFG CO F O R M I N G - P + M DEPT
UNITED METAL TRAOES ASSN SHOP WORK AGMT
U N I T E D P R E S S I NTL INC L U 222
U N I T E D S U P E R M A R K E T A S S N LU 876
V I R G I N I A E L E C T R I C + POW E R CO
W A S H M E T A L T R A D E S INC LU 79
W A S H P O S T C O LU 35
W A S H I N G T O N M E T A L T R A D E S INC L U 104
WEST COAST ENVELOPE EMPLRS COUNCIL CALIF
W E Y E R H A E U S E R CO 5 MILLS 6 LUS
W HITE M O T O R C O R P W H I T E T R U C K D I V LU 32
WISC ELECTRIC POWER CO
M I L W A U K E E LU 2
XEROX CORP XEROGRAPHIC DIV
R O C H E S T E R LU 14A

T o ta l:

1,000
1,000
1,200
2,450
1,700
1,750
11,850
2,450
2,200
7,500
1,000
3,500
1,350
1,400
1,600
2,850
1,800
1,000
10,000
3,050
1,300
1,050
1,200
1,300
2,100
3,100
1,300
5,600

244
127
127
155
135
600
323
184
127
218
323
112

244

93 a g r e e m e n t s ............... . . 267, 000
A p r il

8743
8639
8698
8621
8689
8562
8779
8881
8787
8656
8641
8418
8678
8454
6716
6824
4132
2968
7937
8842
8415
8565
7526
225
4051
8546
8554
3378
1271
1411
3235
4013
6007
3710
8483
1200
8640
8810
8813
8808
1918
1901
7128
4426

04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04




AGC FLORIDA WEST COA S T CHPT 7 LUS
AGC KNOX V I L L E CHPTR LU 818
AGC KNOX V I L L E CHPTR
AGC NE FLA CHPTR
AGC OF AM B A T O N ROU G E C H P T R LU 1177
AGC OF AM B A T O N R O U G E LU 1098
AGC OF AM C H A T T A N O O G A C H P T 6 L US
AGC OF AM FLA W C O A S T C H P T R 3 LUS
A G C OF AM INC L A K E C H A R L E S C H P T L U 207
AGC OF AM INC M I C H C H A P L U 3 2 4 A - B - C - D
AGC OF AM M E M P H I S T E N N LU 1441
AGC OF AM NEW O R L E A N S
A G C OF M A S S INC ♦ 6 O T H S 7 L U S S
AGC TENN CHPTR
A L L I E D E M P L O Y E R S INC
ALLIED EMPLOYERS WHOLESALE GROCERY 8 LUS
A M B A C IND U S INC AM B O S C H D I V LU 2 06 S P R N G F I L D
A MERACE ESNA CORP E L A S T I C STOP NUT D LU 726
ARO INCORPORATED
ASSOC GENL C ONTRS OF MISSOURI
A S S O C G E N L C O N T R S ♦ S I T E I M P R A S S N B H + H ST LO
A S S O C G E N L C O N T R S O F ST L O U I S + 1 O T H
A S S O C H O T E L S OF A T L A N T I C C I T Y LUS 491 ♦ 508
A S S O C M I L K D E A L E R S INC
BENDIX CORP
BLD G T R A D E S E M PLRS ASSN M A S O N C O N T R S 7 LUS
C A L I F C O N F OF M A S O N C O N T R A S S N L A C N T Y L 2
CATERPILLAR TRACTOR CO LU 284
CHARMIN PAPER PRODUCTS CO
CHICAGO LITHOGRAPHERS ASSN
CLA R K EQUIP CO INDUS TRU C K D BATTLE CRE E K 939
CLARK EQ U I P M E N T LU 623
CL E V E ELEC ILLUM CO 3 O IVS LU 270
C O L L I N S RADIO CO E L E C T R O N I C S PLANT O ALLAS
C O N N C O N S T IN D U S A S S N INC 5 LUS J O I N T C N C L 64
C O N S O L P A P E R S INC ♦ C O N S O W E L D C O R P 9 L U S
C O N T R P L A S T E R E R S A S S N O F S O C A L I F INC
C O N T R S A S S N O F E PA H V Y - H W Y C O N S T R
C O N T R S A S S N OF E PA H V Y - H W Y C O N S T R 5 C N T Y
C O N T R S A SSN OF E PA 5 C N T Y 3 LUS
D A Y C O C O R P SOU T H E R N DIV W A Y N E S V I L L E LU 277
DAYT O N TIRE ♦ R U BBER CO LU 178
E A S T B A Y R E S T A U R A N T A S S N INC R I C H M O N O L 595
FISCHER ♦ PORTER CO ♦ 2 SUBS

2,550
1,400
1,500
2,000
2,000
2,100
1,600
3,250
1,200
2,200
1,000
9,650
1,300
1,500
2,000
1,000
1,050
1,000
1,200
1,500
3,000
3,100
1,200
1,800
10,200
1,600
1,400
1,100
1,400
5,500
1,450
1,800
2,900
1,550
1,800
3,300
2,000
1,000
3,250
5,000
1,450
1,350
1,850
1,300

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

LOCATION1

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES2
SIC

STATE

|

UNION

UNIT

A p r il—C o n tin u e d
6789
1924
3366
8717
8477
8569
8801
8608
3713
383
23C
3714
2656
6829
8815
18G8
6783
8875
7902
6795
8894
234
6790
2120
6737
340
2931
6827
1435
5277
7969
8478
8870
2907
3254
3374
2119
1110
6020
1446
7514
7907
8534
8457
6325
7403
2121
1927
6074
3297
1421
623
1639
8572
8461
2964
304
1111
6039
2319
3228
2654
5040

04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04

F O O D F A I R S T O R E S INC ♦ F R E D E R I C K S M K T S INC
F ORMICA C0RP C INCINNATI LU 757
G A R D N E R D E N V E R CO P L A N T S 1 A N D 6 LU 822
G E N L B L D G C O N T R S A S S N INC
G E N L B L D G C O N T R S A S S N INC L U S 54 2 5 4 2 A + 5 4 2 8
G E N L B L D G C O N T R S A S S N INC
GENL CONTRS ASSN LEHIGH VALLEY GENL-SUB-CONTR
G E N L C O N T R S A S S N OF L O U I S V I L L E
I N D I A N A + KY
G O U L D INC
G R E A T A + P T E A C O INC A N N P A G E D I V LU 62
G R E A T E R PIT T S MILK D E A L E R S ASSN LU 205
GTE L E N K U R T INC
H A Y E S - A L B I O N COR P A L B I O N M A L L E A B L E DIV L 4 7 4
H I L L S S U P E R M A R K E T S INC L U 1 5 0 0
H OME B L D R S A S S N OF G R E A T E R ST L O U I S
H U M B L E OIL ♦ R E F I N I N G CO + E NJAY CHE M CO
I-A A R E A G R O C E R Y C O N T R A C T M I N N ♦ W I S C LU 1 1 1 6
I-A C A R P E N T E R S GENL C O N T R A C T I N G A G M T
I-A C L E A N I N G C O N T R S O N C O M M E R C I A L J O B S
I-A D E N V E R R E T A I L G R O C E R S LU 6 3 4
I-A H E A T I N G P R E S S U R E P I P E P I P E F A B LU 235
I-A ICE C R E A M I N D U S T R Y A G R E E M E N T LU 7 5 7
I-A I N D E P E N D E N T M A R K E T S P H I L A
I-A L A D I E S H A N D B A G S ♦ L E A T H E R N O V E L T I E S NYC
I-A M E A T D E P T E M P L O Y E E S G R E A T E R K A N S A S C I T Y
I-A M EAT D R I V E R S C H I C A G O LU 710
I-A M E T A L T R A D E S IND E P C O S C A L I F
I-A N O M I N N F O O D I N D U S T R Y A G M T LU 1 1 1 6
I-A P R I N T I N G I N D U S T R Y OF T W I N C I T I E S LU 2 29
I-A P R I V A T E C A R R I E R A G M T S E A T T L E LU 17 4
I-A T E L E V I S I O N V I O E O T A P E A G M T S Y N D I C A T I O N
I N D I A N A H I G H W A Y C O N S T R U C T O R S INC
KE Y S T O N E BLDG CONTRS ASSN ♦ SUB CONT R S
KEYST O N E C O N S O L I D A T E D INDUS T R I E S LU 449
LE A R S I E G L E R INC N A T L T W I S T D R I L L T O O L SUB
L U F K I N INDUS INC L US 587 1 9 9 9 + 4 29
L U G G A G E + L E A T H E R G O O D S M F R S A S S N INC NY
LUMBER ♦ MILL E MPLRS ASSN 4 LUS
M ETRO EDIS O N CO 5 LUS
MILWAUKEE LITHOGRAPHERS ASSN MILWAUKEE
M I N N E A P O L I S AREA H OTELS ♦ M O T E L S 3 LUS
MINNEAPOLIS AUTOMOBILE DEALERS ASSN LU 974
N A T L E L E C C O N T R S INC N A S S A U ♦ S U F F O L K C H A P T E R
NJ M A S O N C O N T R S A S S N INC
NO ILL R E A O Y M I X ♦ M A T E R I A L S A S S N 2 LUS
N O R T H W E S T E R N MU T U A L LIFE I N S U R A N C E CO LU 500
NY I NDUS C O U N C I L OF THE NATL H A N D B A G A S S N
O W E N S - I L L I N O I S INC B L O W N P L A S T I C C O N T A I N E R
PEOPLES GAS LIGHT ♦ COKE CO
CHICAGO L 18007
PET INC H U S S M A N N R E F R I G CO DIV
P R I N T I N G INDUS OF M E T R O NY INC LU 23
R O C K H I L L P R I N T I N G ♦ F I N I S H I N G CO
R O H M A N D H A A S C O B R I S T O L L U 88
R O O F I N G ♦ S H E E T M E T A L C O N T R S A S S N LU 19
SOUTHW MICH CONTRS ASSN ♦ 1 OTH
S T A N A D Y N E INC C H I C A G O O I V LU 59
S T A N D A R D B R A N D S INC P L A N T E R S P E A N U T S S U F F O L K
STORE F I X T U R E ♦ A R C H I T E C T U R A L W D W O R K INST
WEST PENN POW E R CO LU 102
WHEATON INDUSTRIES PROD AND MAINT LU 219
WHITE MOTOR CORP WHITE FARM EQUIP CO SHOP
W Y M A N G O R D O N C O INC W O R C E S T E R ♦ G R A F T O N P L T S
YELLOW CAB CO PITTSBURGH

T o ta l:

2,200
1,000
1,200
8,500
6,800
7,200
4,950
1,400
1,200
1,500
1,400
2,000
1,100
2,200
4,650
1,200
1,200
2,050
4,500
1,200
1 ,€50
1,400
1,000
4,000
1,150
2,000
2,000
1,300
1,500
3,000
8,000
1,400
3,000
1,500
1,100
1,500
1,800
2,300
1,800
1,600
4,000
1,500
2,000
1,000
2,200
1,500
6,000
1,700
1,950
1,500
1,500
2,500
1,200
1,500
1,200
1,000
1,500
1,200
1,100
2,500
1,500
1,400
1,100

1,950
1,050
2,000
1,800
4,000
8,000
2,500
15,000

107 a g r e e m e n t s ............ ..2 4 3 ,7 0 0

36
33
54
15
29
54
15
73
54
17

59
31
33
23
00
23
23
00
00
21
23
93
34
21
43
74
00
50
21
84
90

184
347
218
143
129
119
143
119
127
531
531
127
553
184
119
500
184
119
118
155
170

4
4
4
2
2
2
2
2
4
1
2
1
1
4
2
4
3
3
3
3
3

20
54
31
54
20
34
54
27
42
78
16
15
34
35
35
31
24
49
27
70
75
17
15
50
63
31
30
49
35
27
22
28
17
15
34
20
25
49
32
35
33
41

21
23
21
40
33
93
41
41
91
00
32
23
33
34
74
21
93
23
35
41
41
21
22
33
35
21
00
33
43
21
57
23
20
34
33
54
93
23
22
42
14
23

531
155
141
155
531
218
184
243
531
162
531
119
553
553
100
141
119
127
243
145
531
127
115
531
163
141
135
118
335
337
314
187
143
553
423
100
342
135
553
335
531

3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
2
2
1
1
1
2
2
4
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
2
4
1
1
2
1
l
2
2
1
1
2
4
4
1
4
1

31
35
58
15
15
15
15
15

62
31
21
88
34
34
34
34

333
163
145
119
531
143
116
119

4
4
2
2
2
2
2
2

54
30
35
15
16
17
16
15
36

20
20

244

May2123
3367
7100
8427
8823
8416
8712
8666

05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05




A C M E B O O T C O M P A N Y INC
A D D R E S S O G R A P H - M U L T I G R A P H CORP OFF ♦ CLER LU49
A F F I L I A T E D R E S T A U R A T E U R S INCO R P O R A T I O N LU 302
AGC NEV CHAP ♦ 2 OTHS SO NE V 4 LUS
A G C O F A M D E T R O I T C H P T R INC 3 L U S
AGC OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R ♦ 1 O T H
A G C OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R IRON W K R S LU 25
AGC OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

LOCATION1

NUMBER

CODES2

OF
WORKERS

SIC

STATE

3,200
5,500
5,900
7,000
2,500
3,000
15,000
10,000
3,100
2,300
9,000
11,000
1,700
1,600
4,000
2,650
1,500
1,800
2,000
1,200
2,000
125,000
2,200
1,000
1,600
1,200
1,000
1,700
2,000
1,300
2,500
2,500
2,300
2,000
2,750
3,200
1,600
3,500
2,000
1,100
1,000
3,000
7,400
1,300
1,700
1,000
1,400
1,500
3,500
2,200
3,500
2,250
5,000
3,600
1,500
1,750
1,150
1,150
4,650
3,200
2,500
1,100
1,000
2,100
8,500
1,000
1,200
1,850
1,200
1,700
1,600
2,000
1,150
2,000
2,650
1,400

15
17
17
15
16
15
15
15
17
33
33
33
33
15
16
17
37
54
17
20
37
23
34
54
15
75
33
73
75
22
19
17
17
37
28
49
26
54
54
17
58
80
33
26
36
34
17
23
17
17
17
17
16
49
15
33
20
32
49
17
17
35
15
33
33
33
17
26
17
17
15
34
35
35
35
35

34
34
34
91
00
00
91
10
00
23
00
30
91
73
00
33
23
00
14
30
34
00
47
33
21
93
31
21
93
56
35
34
34
35
54
74
59
93
93
34
91
41
00
35
15
35
43
60
34
34
34
43
14
32
46
31
33
31
23
34
91
62
00
63
00
63
93
63
35
34
34
93

UNION

UNIT

M ay—C o n tin u e d
8655
8555
8693
8649
8469
8407
84C6
8404
8566
2552
2591
2592
2629
8629
8729
8580
4047
6803
8851
274
4012
80C
2914
6818
8774
7971
2646
7900
7934
604
25
8799
8657
4148
1657
6016
1212
6736
6744
8571
7140
7928
2604
1217
3722
2980
8854
866
8507
8677
8528
8533
8482
6069
8419
2585
377
2317
6025
8524
8522
3368
8459
2611
2610
2645
8538
1261
8869
8747
8460
2977
3255
3354
3206
3213




05
05
05
05
05
C5
05
05
C5
05
05
05
€5
05
05
05
05
05
C5
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
C5
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
€5
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05

AGC OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R LU 3 2 4 - A - B - C
AGC OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R ♦ 2 O T H S
A G C OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R ♦ 1 O T H 3 LU S
A G C OF AM INC ♦ 3 C H P T R S
AGC OF AM I N L A N O E M P I R E C H P T R W A S H ♦ I D A H O
AGC OF AM I N L A N D E M P I R E C H A P H W Y - H V Y
AG C OF AM W E S T E R N - C E N T R A L A R E A
A G C OF M A S S I NC ♦ l O T H 18 L U S
AGC OF OH I O C I N N DIV D IST C O U N C I L
ALAN WOO D STEEL CO LU 1392
A L U M C O OF AM O H I O PA I O W A ILL IND NY 9 L O C S
A L U M CO OF AM T EX NC AR K ALA PA IND + T E N N
A L U M I N U M CO OF A M E R I C A
A SSOC GENL CO N T R S O K L A H O M A CHP T BLDRS DIV
ASSOC GENL CONTRS IDAHO BRANCH CONSTR TRADES
A S S O C STEEL E R E C T O R S OF C H I C A G O LU 1
A VCO COR P AVCC L Y C O M I N G DIV W I L L I A M S P O R T 787
B I G A P P L E S U P E R M A R K E T S INC L U 1063
B L D G T R A D E S E M P L R S A S S N OF W E S T E R N M A S S INC
CHI B A K E R Y E M P L O Y E R S L ABOR C O U N C I L
C L A R K EQUIP CO B U C H A N A N LU 468
C L O T H I N G M F R S A S S N OF T HE US OF AM
C O L E M A N C O INC W I C H I T A LU 1 5 3 9 3
C O N S O L F O O D S C O R P K I T C H E N S OF SA R A LEE LU 2
C O N S T R E M P L O Y E R S L A B O R R E L A T I O N S ASSN OF NY
C O N T R A COS T A A U T O M O T I V E A S S N LUS 1173 ♦ 315
D A Y T O N M A L L E A B L E IRON CO GHR F O U N D R Y DIV
D I R E C T MAIL M A S T E R C O N T R A C T A S S N INC D I S T 65
E A S T B A Y M O T O R C A R D E A L E R S INC 4 LUS
E R W I N M I L L S INC D U R H A M LU 257
FMC C O R P N O R T H E R N O R D D I V F R I D L E Y LU 6 83
G R E A T L A K E S F A B R I C A T O R S ♦ E R E C T O R S A S S N L U 25
GREAT LAKES FABRICATORS ♦ ERECTORS ASSN
H A R L E Y - D A V I D S O N M O T O R C O INC LU 209
H E R C U L E S INC R A D F O R D A R M Y A M M PLT L U 3 - 4 9 5
H O U S T O N L I G H T I N G ♦ P O W E R C O L U 66
HUDSON PULP ♦ PAPER CORP
I— A M A S T E R F O O D ♦ L I Q U O R A G R E E M E N T L U 5 8 8
I— A M A S T E R F O O D L I Q U O R A G M T F R E S N O L U 1 2 8 8
I— A M I L L W R I G H T C O N V E Y O R ♦ M A C H I N E E R E C T O R
I— A R E S T ♦ B A R S B E L L I N G H A M ♦ 3 C O U N T I E S
I-A T W I N C I T Y H O S P I T A L S M I N N E A P O L I S - S T PAUL
K A I S E R A L U M I N U M ♦ C H E M I C A L C O R P 13 L U S 3
KIMB E R L Y CLARK CORP N E E N A H MILL LU 467 ♦ 482
L E V I T O N M F G C O INC LU 1 2 7 4
M A S T E R L O C K CO M I L W A U K E E LU 4 6 9
M E C H C O N T R S A S S N OF ST L O U I S M O INC LU 562
M E R I T C L O T H I N G CO INC KY A N D T ENN
M E T R O D E T R O I T P L U M B C O N T R A S S N INC ♦ 1 OTH
METRO DETROIT PLUMBING ♦ MECHANICAL CONTRS
N E C A O F D E T R O I T S O U T H E M I C H L U 58
N E C A ST L O U I S C H A P T LU 1
NEW ENG ROAD B U ILDERS ASSN MASS
NO I N DIANA PU B L I C S E R V I C E
OMA H A BLDG CONT R S E M P L R S ASSN LU 1140
ORMET CORPORATION
O S C A R M A Y E R ♦ CO C H I C A G O LU 100
O W E N S - I L L I N O I S INC C O L U M B U S L U S 106 ♦ 245
PA P O W E R A NO L IGHT CO
P A I N T I N G ♦ D E C O R A T I N G C O N T R S O F AM INC DC 22
PAINTING DECORATING CONTRS NW DRYWALL CONTR
P ARIS M F G CO PAR I S LU 1541
QUAO-CITY BUILDERS ASSN 9 LUS
R E Y N O L D S M E T A L S CO A L L O Y S P L A N T LU 2 0 0 3
R E Y N O L D S ME T A L S CO LU 4 8 1 3 3
REYNOLDS METALS CO LISTERHILL
S A N F R A N E L E C C O N T R S A S S N INC I N S I D E W I R E M E N
SCOTT PAPER CO SOUTHERN OPERATIONS
SHEET METAL + AIR C O N D G C O N T R S ASSN MIL W LU24
S H E E T M E T A L E M P L R S A S S N O F D E T R O I T L U 80
SOUTHW MICH CONTRS ASSN ♦ l OTH 6 LUS
ST E E L F AB A S S N OF SO C A L I F INC LU 509
SUNDSTRAND CORP ROCKFORD + BELVIDERE LU 592
TECUMSEH PRODUCTS CO FACTORY AGMT LU 750
TELEOYNE CONTINENTAL MOTORS
T E L E D Y N E W I S C O N S I N MOTOR LU 283

33
31
34
35

129
115
100
143
129
119
119
143
119
335
220
335
220
119
600
116
553
184
143
108
553
305
335
108
119
600
484
332
600
202
553
116
129
107
357
127
100
184
184
119
145
903
335
231
127
553
170
305
170
170
127
127
143
335
143
335
155
135
500
164
164
553
119
220
335
600
127
100
187
187
119

116
553
553
553
553

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
4
4
1
2
2
2
4
4
2
2
1
2
4
1
2
2
1
2
2
4
1
2
2
4
1
4
1
3
3
3
3
3
4
1
1
1
2
4
2
2
2
2
2
1
2
1
1
1
4
2
2
1

2
1
4
1
2
1
2

2
2
2
4

l
4
4

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

LOCATION1

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES2
SIC

STATE

UNION

UNIT

M ay—C o n tin u e d
6321
8C2
124C
1641
8609
6054
8625
6 0 8C
5039

05
C5
05
05
05
05
05
05
05

T R E E F R U I T S L A B O R R E L A T I O N S C O M M I T T E E INC 760
U N I F O R M M A N U F A C T U R E R S E X C H A N G E I NC
U N I O N CAM P C 0 R P S A V A N N A H PLANT 3 LUS
U N I O N C A R B I D E C0RP C H E M I C A L S ♦ P L A S T I C DIV
V E N T I L A T I N G ♦ AIR C O N D I T G C O N T R S ♦ 2 O T H S 73
W A S H I N G T O N G AS L I G H T C O W A S H MD VA
WEST TENN CONSTR INOUS COLLECTIVE BARG GROUP
W I S C O N S I N POWER ♦ LIGHT CO LU 965
Y E L L C W CAB CO OF SAN F R A N C I S C O

T o ta l:

1,200
1,000
3,000
1,200
5,700
2,100
2,000
1,400
1,100

50
23
26
28
17
49
15
49
41

91
21
58
22
33
50
62
35
93

531
305
100
357
187
500
119
127
531

2
2
1
1
2
4
2
4
1

37
54
35
15
17
15
17
16
17
17
16
16
16
15
16
17
15
33
33
78
78
15
15
15
15
15
31
37
37
26
22
20
35
35
26
26
20
17
23
26
27
38
48
49
26
26
26
23
15
15
37
37
15
15
17
25
10
17
35
33
33
79
80

43
23
31
94
94
94
93
93
93
93
00
00
93
93
87
93
93
00
22
00
00
31
31
74
93
93
11
34
62
12
22
93
00
21
72
00
00
34
21
11
33
21
00
58
71
11
23
21
43
74
90
90
93
93
93
93
86
00
23
87
87
00
21

553
155
218
ICO
119
531
119
119
143
168
143
600
129
600
143
170
531
553
335
102
102
119
143
119
143
129
705
553
218
231
337
186
553
100
100
231
357
115
142
231
204
121
346
127
231
100
231
142
119
143
119
600
119
168
170
119
335
116
218
335
335
102
332

4
1
l
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
4
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
4
1
4
1
1
4
1
4
4
4
2
2
1
2
4
4
4
1
4
1
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
2
2
1
2
4
1
1
2
2

93 a g r e e m e n t s ................. , . 396, 100
Ju n e

4000
67CC
3281
8597
8564
8858
8561
8490
8542
8543
8465
8491
8468
8417
8464
8504
8411
2590
2589
7920
7912
8623
865C
8619
8403
8413
2103
4003
4135
1204
636
295
3319
3344
1238
1259
265
8549
845
1225
1414
4418
5719
6015
1266
1209
1211
887
8817
8895
4112
4111
8401
8402
8877
1118
8322
8582
3372
2582
2583
7924
7930

06
06
06
06
06
06
C6
06
G6
C6
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
C6
C6
06
06
06
06
06
C6
06
C6
C6
C6
06
06
06
06
C6
06
G6
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
C6
06
06
06
06
G6
06
06
06
06
06
G6
06
06
06
06
06




A C F I N D U S T R I E S INC C A R T E R C A R B U R E T O R D I V
A C M E M A R K E T S INC F O R T Y - F O R T L 72
A D D R E S S O G R A P H - M U L T I G R A P H C ORP E U C L I D LU 1228
AGC OF AM A L A S K A C H A P T E R
AGC OF AM A L A S K A CH P T 5 LUS
AGC OF AM A L A S K A C H A P LU 9 59
AGC OF AM B A Y AREA
AGC OF AM C E N T R A L ♦ NO CAL I F
AGC OF AM C E N T R A L ♦ NO C A L I F
AGC OF AM C E N T R A L ♦ NO CAL I F
AGC OF AM INLAND E M PIRE C H P T R W A S H ♦ IDAHO
A GC OF AM M O B I L E C H P T R
AGC OF AM N O R T H E R N CALIF
AGC OF AM SAN D I E G O C H P T R ♦ 2 O T H S
AGC OF AM U T A H C H P T R
AGC OF C A L I F ♦ 1 O T H I NOUS ♦ GE N L P I P E F I T T I N G
AGC OF SO C A L I F ♦ 2 O T H
A L U M CO OF AM O H I O + C A L I F
AM S M E L T I N G ♦ R E F I N I N G CO P E R T H PLT LU 365
A S S N OF M O T I O N P I C T U R E S T ELE M O T I O N P I C T U R E S
A S S N OF M O T I O N P I C T U R E S T H E A T R I C A L AG M T
A S S O C B L D G C O N T R S O F N O R T H W E S T E R N O H I O INC
A S S O C B L D G C O N T R S O F N O R T H W E S T E R N O H I O INC
ASSOC GENL CONTRS HOUSTON CHPTR
ASS O C G ENL C O N T R S A N D 3 OT H S SO C A L I F CHPT
ASS O C G E N L C O N T R S + 2 O T H S SO C A L I F 3
AUBURN SHOE MFRS ASSN AUBURN ♦ LEWISTON
A UTO S P E C I A L T I E S MFG CO LU 793
A V C O C O R P A E R O S T R U C T U R E S DIV N A S H V I L L E LU 735
B R O W N C O + B R O W N N E W H A M P S H I R E INC L U 75
C A D I L L A C W A R P I N G ♦ S I Z I N G C O LU 75
C ALIF ♦ H A W A I I A N SUGAR CO C R O C K E T T
C A S E J I C O IND IOWA W IS ♦ ILL 5 LUS
CHIC PNEUMATIC TOOL CO UTICA
CCNT CA N CO PLANTS 528 * 536 HODGE
C O N T A I N E R C O R P OF AM LUS 250 2 5 8 392 4 9 8 807
CPC I N T E R N A T I O N A L INC C O R N IN D U S T R I A L DIV
DETROIT MASON CONTRS ASSN DETROIT CHPT
EMPIRE STATE CLOTH ♦ CAP MFRS LU 2
ETHYL CORP OXFORD PAPER CO 0 RUMFORD LU 900
F R A N K L I N A S S N OF C H I C A G O LU 16
GAF CO R P B I N G H A M T O N LU 306
GENL TELE CO OF THE SOUTH W E S T
G E O R G I A P O W E R CO
GEORGIA-PACIFIC CORP CROSSETT DIV-PAPER
GREAT NORTHERN PAPER CO 2 MILLINOCKET MILLS
H A M M E R M I L L PAPER CO ERIE DIV LU 620
I— A I N D S H O P S C L O T H H A T S ♦ C A P S L U 2
I-A L I N C L N W A R R E N M O N T G M R Y ♦ ST C H A S C O N T R S
I— A N O C E N T R A L T E X A S L A B O R E R S C O N T R S L U 6 4 8
I-A P A C I F I C C O A S T S H I P B U I L D I N G ♦ R E P A I R
I - A P A C I F I C C O A S T S H I P B U I L D I N G «• R E P A I R F I R M S
I-A SO C A L I F G E N L C O N T R S
ERS SO C A L I F
I-A SO C A L I F G E N L C O N T R S
SO C A L I F
I N O U S C O N T R S U M I C I NC L U 36
I NDUS R E L S C O U N C I L OF F U R N M F R S SO C A L I F
INSPI R A T I O N C O N S O L C O P P E R CO LU 586
IRON W ORKER E M P L O Y E R S OF C A L I F O R N I A
JOY MFG CO F R A N K L I N LU 1842
KENNECOTT COPPER CORP UTAH COPPER DIV LU 392
KENNECOTT COPPER CORP UTAH COPPER DIV LU 4347
LEAGUE OF NY T H E A T R E S INC
LE A G U E OF V O L U N T A R Y H O S P I T A L S ♦ H O M E S OF NY

2,000
1,500
1,100
5,700
1,800
5,000
27,000
1,200
14,350
3,800
2,500
7,000
9,000
9,150
2,500
2,500
4,000
2,000
1,100
23,500
23,500
1,800
1,400
6,000
2 C ,000
23,000
1,200
1,550
2,500
1,550
1,000
1,100
5,050
1,450
1,200
1,100
3,000
3,500
1,000
1,600
1,800
1,500
6,100
4,100
1,200
2,200
1,360
1,650
1,500
2,500
1,800
15,000
25,000
10,000
2,150
1,200
1,100
12,000
1,200
1,550
1,150
17,000
26,000

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

LOCATION1

CODES2
SIC

STATE

UNION

UNIT

54
49
49
36
17
82
36
2'
17
36
17
33
49
37
17
17
17
17
33
26
17
36
17
80
26
80
17
25
35
37
28
42
33
20
53
41
36

21
21
21
62
93
14
42
20
93
21
21
31
31
90
93
93
93
93
86
23
93
31
21
33
34
91
93
93
35
21
74
20
22
93
50
33
43

155
127
127
347
143
500
553
155
170
127
127
218
342
127
164
164
164
164
335
231
170
347
119
600
231
903
187
100
218
500
100
531
335
531
500
186
127

4
4
4
4
2
1
4
2
2
2
2
1
4
2
2
2
2
2
4
2
2
4
2
1
1
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
2
4
4
1

20
10
48
33
33
78
78
17
80
48
48
48
48
48
20
35
31
31
23
35
33
48
48
58
48
49
34
22
28
48
58
58
34
44

00
84
00
23
31
93
00
21
21
23
23
23
23
00
33
35
00
00
93
74
16
52
50
33
00
31
62
56
31
51
93
93
42
00

208
357
346
500
500
162
162
164
118
516
516
516
127
346
531
107
188
334
134
218
553
500
346
145
346
127
112
337
335
516
145
145
553
186

4
1
4
1
4
2
2
2
2
4
4
4
4
4
1
1
4
4
2
4
1
4
4
2
4
4
1
1
1
4
2
2
1
2

June— Continued
6751
6066
6065
3658
8553
7932
3637
215
8684
3645
8537
2657
6023
4153
8518
8527
8706
8516
2586
1265
8513
3620
8871
7959
1290
7949
85C3
1104
3314
4043
1642
5240
2576
289
6517
5042
3749

C6
C6
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
C6
06
C6
C6
06
06
06

291
8311
5700
2505
2504
7946
7921
8515
7948
5702
5701
5703
5705
5704
385
3203
2105
2104
814
3231
2599
5711
5707
7104
5712
6085
2927
609
1603
5783
7130
7105
2962
5428

07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07

L C B L A W INC
UTICA LU 1
2,000
LONG ISLAND L I G H T I N G CO LU 1381
1,300
LONG ISLAND L I G H T I N G CO LU 1049
2,800
M A G N A V 0 X CO OF TENN G R E E N V I L L E LU 796
2,800
M A S O N C O N T R S A S S N INC LOS A N G E L E S 7 L U S
1,000
MASS I N S T I T U T E OF T E C H N O L O G Y D R A P E R LAB
1,250
MAYTAG COMPANY NEWTON ♦ HAMPTON
2,700
M E A T T R A D E S I N S T I T U T E INC L U 1 7 4
5,000
M E C H C O N T R S C O U N C I L OC C E N T R A L C A L I F DIST 36
2,200
M F R S OF I L L U M I N A T I O N P R O D U C T S INC N Y L U 3
2,550
NY E L E C T R I C A L C O N T R S A S S N INC ♦ 2 O T H S L 3
10,000
OHIO BRASS CO M A N S F I E L D LU 2158
1,000
O H I O E D I S O N CO LOCS 118 126 181 350 351 4 5 7
1,850
PACIFIC COAST S H I P B U I L D E R S ASSN 6 LUS
2,000
P A I N T I N G ♦ D E C O R A T I N G C O N T R S A S S N LA
8,000
PA I N T I N G ♦ D E C O R A T I N G C ONTRS ASSN SAN DIEGO
4 , COO
P A I N T I N G ♦ D E C O R A T I N G C O N T R S A S S N OF SF INC
6,000
PENINSULA AREA PAINTERS AND DECORATING CONTRS
2,500
PHELPS DODGE CORP MORENCI-BISBEE-DOUGLAS
2,300
P H I L A D E L P H I A C O N T A I N E R AS S N LU 375
1,100
PLUMBING-HEATING ♦ PIPING EMPLYS COUNCIL
9,000
R E L I A N C E E L E C T R I C CO 4 PLTS LU 737
1,150
R O C K L A N D CNTY C A R P E N T E R CON T R S ASSN INC 964
1,050
1,000
R U S H P R E S B Y T E R I A N ST L UKES M E D I C A L C E N T E R
S C O T T P A P E R C O SD W A R R E N D IV C E N T R A L M I L L
1,000
SEATTLE AREA HOSPITAL COUNCIL
2,200
SHEET METAL ♦ AIR C O N D C O N T R S NATL ASSN
1,100
SC C A L I F A S S N OF C A B I N E T M P R S
2,400
TECUMSEH PROOUCTS CO LAUSON ENGINE DIV L 1259
1,500
TRICO PRODUCTS CORP BUFFALO
2,300
UNION CARBIDE CORP CHEMICALS ♦ PLASTICS
1,800
U N I T E O PAR C E L S E R V I C E INC
3,000
US M E T A L S R E F I N I N G CO LU 837
1,550
WHOLE S A L E BAKERS GROUP 9 LUS
1,300
WOODWARD ♦ LOTHROP
5,000
Y E L L O W C AB CO ♦ C H E C K E R TAXI CO CHI LU 7 77
5,000
Z E N I T H R ADIO CORP S P R I N G F I E L O LU 453
3,400
Total: 100 a g r e e m e n t s ...... . . 4 7 4 ,3 5 0

July




AM C R Y S T A L S UGAR C O - S U G A R DIV
A M M E T A L C L I M A X INC C L I M A X M O L Y B D E N U M C O D I V 3
AM T E L E P H O N E ♦ T E L E G R A P H L O N G L INES DEPT
ARMCO STEEL CORP BUTLER
ARMCO STEEL CCRP MIDDLETOWN
ASSN MOTION PICTURE ♦ TV PRODCRS THEATRICAL
ASSN MOTION PICTURE ♦ TV PRODUCERS FILM AGMT
A S S N OF M A S T E R P A I N T E R S ♦ D E C O R S OF N Y C INC
A S S N OF P R I V A T E H O S P I T A L S INC L U 1 4 4
B E L L T E L E C O OF PA
B ELL TELE CO OF PA C O M P T R O L L E R S DE P T
B E L L T E L E C O OF PA
BELL T E L E P H O N E CO OF PENN LU 1944
B E L L T E L E P H O N E L A B O R A T O R I E S INC
B R A C H E J + SO N S INC LU 7 38
BRIGGS ♦ STRATTON CORP MILWAUKEE LU 232
BROWN SHOE CO
BROWN SHOE CO
C A L I F S P O R T S W E A R ♦ D R E S S A S S N INC
C A M E R O N I R O N W O R K S INC L U 2 1 5
C H A S E B R A S S ♦ C O P P E R CO INC L 1565
C H E S A P E A K E ♦ POTO M A C TELE CO OF MD
C HESAPEAKE ♦ POTOMAC TELE CO ALL DEPTS
CHI U N I O N RES T E M P L O Y E E S C O U N C I L
CIN ♦ SUBURAN BELL TELE CO ♦ I OTH
COLUMBUS 4 SO OHIO ELEC CO LU 1466
C O M B U S T I O N E N G INC C H A T T A N O O G A L U 6 5 6
CONE M ILLS CORP WHITE OAK PLANT LU 1391
D I A M O N D S H AMROCK CHEM I C A L CO P I N E S V I L L E WKS
DIAMOND STATE TELE CO
EAST BAY R E S T A U R A N T ASSN LU 823
E A S T B A Y R E S T A U R A N T A S S N INC L U 3 1 - 5 2 - 2 2 8
FISHER CONTROLS CO M A R S H ALLTOWN LU 893 UNIT 1
G R E A T L A K E S A S S N OF M A R I N E O P E R A T O R S

2,300
1,450
26,000
3,500
6,000
1,200
1,200
10,000
3,900
2,650
2,000
12,000
8,800
1,400
2,800
6,300
8,000
5,800
1,350
2,200
1,050
2,850
34,400
2,000
4,250
1,450
3,050
2,150
1,050
1,350
4,000
8,000
1,250
3,000

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

LOCATION1

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES2
SIC

STATE

UNION

UNIT

J uly—C o n tin u e d
1231
6901
7918
279
5722
5724
5726
5728
2932
2933
4407
8320
1409
5795
5733
5731
5732
1637
653C
6534
6522
6521
6519
6540
5734
5739
5784
5737
5736
5749
5747
5744
574C
5738
5742
5746
5750
16
5753
5751
5752
5759
6786
3662
7123
2919
3304
2540
4040
5763
5792
5764
5765
3369
4114
1281
3682
3736
3681
3678
3680
3687
3679
3689
3684
3676
3686
3685
3768
5772
1277
8308
323
5773
5774
5030

07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
€7
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
C7
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
C7
07
07
07
Cl
Cl
Cl
07
07
Cl
07
07
07
07
Cl
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07




H A M M E R M I L L P APER CO T H I L M A N Y PULP + PAP E R DIV
I— A A U T O M O T I V E R E P A I R I N D U S L U 1 4 1 4
I-A BAS I C T H E A T R I C A L M O T I O N P I C T U R E A GMT
I— A P H I L A D E L P H I A B A K E R Y E M P L O Y E R S L 4 6 3
676
ILL B E L L T E L E CO
ILL B E L L T E L E C O ILL + IND C O M M ♦ M A R D E P T S
ILL B E L L T E L E P H O N E C O C O M P T R O L L E R S D E P T ILL
I N D I A N A B E L L T E L E C O INC
IRON L E A G U E OF P H I L A + V I C I N I T Y L U 502
K E L S E Y - H A Y E S CO H E I N T Z DIV LU 834
L EEDS + N O R T H R U P CO LU 1350
M A G M A C O P P E R C O SAN M A N U E L D I V LU 937
MC C A L L C O R P M C C A L L P R I N T I N G C O LU 199
MICH BELL TELEPHONE CO SWITCHING SYSTEMS DEPT
MICH BELL TELEPHONE CO TRAFFIC DEPT
MICH BELL TELEPHONE CO COMPTROLLERS OPERS
MICH BELL TELEPHONE CO PLANT DEPT
M O N S A N T O CO S P R I N G F I E L D P LANT LU 288
M O N T G O M E R Y W A R O ♦ C O INC C A T A L O G H O U S E LU 149
M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D + C O R E T A I L S T O R E S LU 149
M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D + C O INC C A T A L O G H O U S E LU 838
M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D ♦ C O INC CHI C A T A L O G H S E 7 4 3
M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D + C O INC A L B A N Y C A T A L O G H O U S E
M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D CO INC M E T R O P D I S T D E P T S L 1 4 9
MOUNTAIN STATES TELE ♦ TELE CO TRAFF ♦ PLANT
N J BELL TEL CO VP + COM P ♦ G E N L D E P T S LU 827
N E W E N G T E L E ♦ T E L E C O P L T «- E N G D E P T 9 L U S
NEW E NGLAND TELE ♦ TELE CO ACCT UN I T LU 2307
NEW EN G L A N O TELE CO
NEW YORK TELEPHONE CO + 1 OTH
NEW YORK T E L E P H O N E CO ACCT- EXEC- TREA DEPTS
NEW YORK T E L E P H O N E CO COM M U P STATE
NJ BEL L T E L E C O PLT ♦ E NG D E P T S LU 827
NJ B E L L T E L E C O T R A F F I C D E P T
N O R T H W E S T E R N B E L L T E L E CO
NY TE L E CO D O W N S T A T E
OHIO BELL TELE CO
OLIN CORP NEW HAVEN LU 609
PACIFIC NORTHWEST BELL TELE CO
PACIFIC TEL AND TEL CO LU 1011
P A C I F I C TELE 4 TELE CO 4 BELL OF NEV ALL DEPT
PACIFIC TELE 4 TELE CO TRAFFIC
PHILA FOOD STORE EMPLRS LAB O R CO U N C I L LU 169
RCA CORP C A M D E N AREA M ASTER AGMT
R E S T A S S N O F T H E S T A T E O F W A S H INC 2 L U S
R O C K W E L L M FG CO S T E R L I N G F A U C E T C O LU 6 2 1 4
S E A L E D P O W E R C O R P M U S K E G O N LU 637
SHARON STEEL CORP PROD 4 MAINTENANCE
SMITH A 0 CORP LU 19806
SO B E L L TELE 4 T E L E CO
SOUTH CENTRAL BELL TELE CO
S O U T H E R N NEW E N G L A N D T E L E P H O N E CO
SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELE CO ALL DEPTS
S P E R R Y R A N D C O R P J O P L I N P L A N T L U 200
TODD S H I P Y A R D S CORP LOS AN G E L E S DIV LU 9
UNION CAMP FRANKLIN
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O M P A N Y LU 19 7 4
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC S H R E V E P O R T LU 2188
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC M O N T G O M E R Y P L A N T 1942
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC LU 1470
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC I N D P L S W O R K S L U 1 5 0 4
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC L U 1 8 5 9
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC B U F F A L O
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC C O L U M B U S P L A N T L U 202
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO M E R R I M A C K V A L L E Y WOR K S
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC LUS 3 0 6 0 3061 4 30 6 2
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC A L L E N T O W N LU 1522
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC H A W T H O R N E W O R K S
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC M O N T G O M E R Y P L T L 19 4 2
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC I N S T A L L A T I O N D E P T
WESTVACO H4D CONTAINER DIV 8 LOCS
WHITE PINE COPPER CO
WINERY EMPLOYERS ASSN
WISCONSIN TELEPHONE CO PLANT DEPT
WISCONSIN TELEPHONE CO TRAFFIC DEPT
Y E L L O W C A B C O O F C A L I F LA

T o ta l:

1,300
1,500
1,200
1,750
9,000
1,950
1,700
6,550
1,500
1,000
2,100
2,200
1,700
2,300
7,450
1,300
9,200
1,150
1,800
1,800
1,000
2,500
1,200
3,000
20,050
1,700
17,500
2,100
12,500
36,050
1,150
1,800
13,200
5,750
20,750
8,050
20,050
1,700
8,950
2,350
46,500
11,200
1,800
1,500
2,800
1,000
1,000
4,600
4,800
53,750
40,800
10,300
57,050
1,050
2,700
1,600
5,400
2,400
1,950
10,600
6,250
15,400
1,950
7,200
6,550
5,250
3,100
3,350
2,650
28,300
1,200
2,400
1,500
3,200
2,900
1,600

110 a g r e e m e n t s ................. 7 7 4 ,1 0 0

26
55
78
20
48
48
48
48
34
34
38
10
27
48
48
48
48
28
53
53
53
53
53
53
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
19
48
48
48
48
54
36
58
34
35
33
37

35
93
00
00
30
30
33
32
23
23
23
86
31
34
34
34
34
14
41
41
43
33
21
41
00
22
10
10
10
21
21
21
22
22
00
00
31
16
00
00
00
93
23
22
91
55
34
00
35

231
218
162
531
346
500
127
346
116
553
553
335
243
346
346
346
346
347
531
531
531
531
531
531
346
127
127
127
127
346
516
516
127
346
346
516
346
218
346
127
346
500
531
500
145
335
553
335
101

48
48
48
48
35
37
26
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
48
26
10
20
48
48
41

50
00
16
00
43
93
54
46
72
33
22
32
33
21
31
14
56
23
33
33
00
00
34
93
35
35
93

346
346
516
346
107
320
100
127
127
127
127
127
127
346
127
346
346
127
127
127
346
231
335
126
346
346
531

1
3
3
3
4
1
4
4
2
1
1
1
1
4
4
4
4
1
1
1
1
4
1
4
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
2
4
2
4
1
4
1
4
4
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
4
4
1
4
1
1
1
4
1
1
1
4
4
4
2
4
4
1

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

LOCATION1

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES2
SIC

STATE

UNION

49
33
33
33
28
33
33
33
10
54
54
49
35
33
33
10
37
35
32
54
10
35
26
20
58
48
33
33
33
33
33
34
33
48
33
33
35
33
33
33
33
33
48
33
37
54
33
48
48
48
37
33
20
33
10
14
14
56
27
35
25
34
10
33
33
44
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
48
33

63
00
00
23
34
00
00
22
00
31
31
34
23
CO
31
00
23
23
00
20
00
35
20
93
33
33
32
61
34
00
93
21
23
46
23
30
34
30
34
30
32
00
22
00
00
31
33
00
21
00
43
51
93
00
41
93
93
21
34
31
21
00
41
00
00
23
22
23
73
74
84
33
43
00
52

127
335
335
335
357
335
335
335
335
184
155
342
335
335
335
335
320
218
137
155
335
335
231
531
145
500
335
335
335
335
335
218
335
346
335
335
166
335
335
335
335
500
346
553
335
155
335
516
516
516
553
335
186
335
335
531
129
332
243
335
312
335
335
335
335
335
127
127
127
344
127
500
346
346
500

UNIT

August
6C00
2502
2506
2508
1622
2510
2512
2513
83CC
6704
6703
6059
3207
2517
2518
8321
4102
3243
2313
6725
8319
3236
1286
233
7125
5725
2524
2501
2527
2526
2528
2910
2622
5730
2532
2554
3272
2575
2523
2522
2655
2534
5741
2614
4038
6813
2535
5748
5743
5745
4171
2628
374
2539
8324
8318
8329
6911
1453
3278
1106
2936
8301
2544
2545
5413
3750
3688
3683
3774
3773
3677
3721
5771
2613

08
f.8
C8
C8
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
C8
C8
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08




A L ABAMA POWER CO A LABAMA 8 LUS
A L L E G H E N Y L U 0 L U M I N D U S T R I E S INC NA T L AGMT
ARMC0 STEEL CORP MASTER 7 LOCATIONS
BABCOCK ♦ WILCOX CO TUBULAR PRODUCTS OIV
BASF W Y A N D O T T E CORP INDUS CHEM GROUP LU 7-627
BETHLEHEM STEEL CORP MASTER AGMT
CF ♦ I STE E L C O R P C O L O ♦ C A L I F
CF ♦ I S TEEL CO R P T R E N T O N + R O E B B I N G
C L E V E C L I F F S I R O N C O M I C H ♦ M I N N D I S T 33
C L E V E F 0 0 0 I N D U S T R Y C O M M I T T E E LU 880
CLEVE FOOD INDUSTRY C O M M I T T E E LU 427
CONSUMERS POWER CO OPER-MAINT-CONST EMPLS
C O C P E R - B E S S E M E R CO G R O V E C I T Y LU 1153
C R U C I B L E INC P ♦ M PA N Y ♦ NJ 6 L US
DETROIT STEEL CORP PRODUCTION + MAINTENANCE
DIAMOND SHAMROCK CORP
C R A V C C O R P E N G W K S D H E A V Y M E T A L S P L T L U 61
E A T O N C O R P INDUS T R U C K 0 P H I L A LU 1717
G L A S S C O N T A I N E R M F R S I N S T I T U T E INC
G R E A T A ♦ P TEA CO INC NJ ♦ NY 4 LUS
HANNA MINING CO ♦ 3 OTHERS
HARNISCHFEGER CORP MAIN ♦ WEST ALLIS PLANTS
I-A C O R R U G A T E O B O X I ND L U 3 8 1
I— A F L U I D M I L K + I C E C R E A M A G R E E M E N T
I-A R E S T A U R A N T S C H I C A G O 5 L O C A L S
ILL B E L L T E L E P H O N E C O - C O M M D E P T ♦ O T H S
INLAND STEEL CO INDIANA HARBOR
I N T E R L A K E INC N E W P O R T W O R K S
J O N E S + L A U G H L I N S TEEL CO R P W A R R E N LU 1357
JONES ♦ LAUGHLIN STEEL CORP
KA I S E R STEEL C ORP P R O D M AINT STEEL MFG DIV
K E L S E Y - H A Y E S CO U TICA DIV LU 1509 L O D G E 157
L A T R O B E STE E L CO
LINCOLN TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
LUKENS STEEL C O M P A N Y LUS 1165 ♦ 2295
L Y K E S - Y O U N G S T O W N COR P Y N G T W N SHEET ♦ TUB E SUB
M I C H I G A N P A T T E R N MF R S A S S N OF D E T R O I T ♦ VIC
M I C R O D O T INC V A L L E Y M O U L D ♦ I R O N CO D I V
NAIL STEEL COR P G REAT L A K E S STEEL DIV
N A T I O N A L ST E E L C ORP G R A N I T E C I T Y ST E E L CO
NA T L STEEL C O R P M I D W E S T STE E L OIV LU 6103
NATL STEEL CORP W E I R T O N STEEL DIV
NJ BELL TELE CO C O M M ♦ M A R K E T I N G DEPTS
NL I N D U S T R I E S INC O O E H L E R - J A R V I S DIV 4 LUS
N O R T H AM R O C K W E L L C O R P 5 P L A N T S 5 LUS
NORTHEASTERN OHIO FOOD INDUSTRY EMPLOYERS
N O R T H W E S T E R N STEEL ♦ WIRE CO
NY TELE CO TR A F F I C D O W N S T A T E
NY T E L E CO U P S T A T E NY
NY T E L E P H O N E CO A C C O U N T I N G
P A CIFIC CAR ♦ FOUNDRY CO 2 SUBS LU 710
PHOENIX STEEL CORP PROD ♦ MAIN EMPLS
R A L S T O N PURINA CO VAN C A M P SEA FOOD DIV
REPUBLIC STEEL CORP PROD ♦ MAINT
RESERVE MINING CO LUS 4757 + 5296
RCCK PRO D ♦ REA D Y M I X E D C O N C R E T E E M PLRS S CAL
ROCK PRODS ♦ READY MIX C O N C R E T E EMPLO Y E R S
SHOE R E T A I L E R S L E A G U E INC
S I M P L I C I T Y P A T T E R N CO INC N I L E S PLA N T LU 158
T I M K E N C O L U 1 123 + 2173 + 2730
U P H O L S T E R E O F U R N M F R S A S S N LU 76
US S TEEL C O R P AM BRIDGE D P ♦ M
US S TEEL COR P MINN ORE O P E R S + S A L A R I E D EMPLR
US S T E E L C O R P P ♦ M EAST ♦ WE S T O P E R S
US S T E E L C O R P P R O D U C I N G O P E R A T I O N S C L E R - T E C H
US S T E E L C O R P U N L I C E N S E D P E R S O N N E L P I T T S
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC L U 147 0
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC R E A D I N G LU 1898
WESTERN ELECTRIC CO OKLAHOMA CITY WORKS
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC D A L L A S PLANT
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO M F G 0 O E N V E R LU 230 0
W E S T E R N ELECTRIC CO T E L E T Y P E SKOKIE
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC M F G D K A N S A S C I T Y
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O M P A N Y INC
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O M P A N Y INC

2,600
9,000
13,000
4,600
1,000
54,800
5,000
1,100
2,650
5,000
4,000
5,400
1,250
7,100
2,100
2,200
1,200
1,300
2,500
15,000
1,800
2,000
1,100
2,500
5,000
2,250
17,000
1,000
1,050
21,000
6,500
1,100
1,450
1,400
3,400
17,150
1,350
1,500
9,500
3,300
1,300
10,100
3,500
3,850
2,200
1,200
3,700
16,750
5,550
3,950
1,000
1,200
1,250
35,000
2,350
2,200
1,050
1,200
1,600
8,150
1,500
4,300
2,450
105,000
7,100
1,100
1,350
1,650
5,350
1,100
1,900
2,900
4,250
14,500
5,400

4
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
4
2
2
4
1
4
4
4
1
4
2
4
4
4
3
3
3
1
1
4
1
4
1
4
1
4
1
4
2
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
2
l
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
2
2
2
1
4
2
4
1
4
4
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
1
4
1

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

LOCATION1

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES2
SIC

STATE

UNION

UNIT

A u g u st—C o n tin u e d
2538
2648
2551
2553

08
08
08
08

WHEELING-PITTSBURGH STEEL C0RP PROD
WHEELING-PITTSBURGH STEEL CORP
WHEELING-PITTSBURGH STEEL CORP
Y O U N G S T O W N SHEET 4 TUBE CO CLERI C A L

T o ta l:

♦ MAINT

EES

6,800
1,000
10,000
1,450

33
33
33
33

00
00
00
30

335
335
335
335

4
4
4
4

37
32
50
33
37
20
35
49
33
32
33
36
33

30
31
84
58
23
71
31
00
32
55
31
32
23
22
21

4
4
2
1

79 a g r e e m e n ts ............... . . 528, 350
S e p te m b e r

4001
2303
6319
2507
4057
372
3229
6045
2514
2307
2516
367C
255C
3209
3268
8331
231C
4119
8773
337
5417
3237
7923
39C
237
336
7942
1436
249
8493
2342
2110
2109
2500
2525
2957
678C
2530
2101
4065
4066
5419
3360
5421
5420
5423
1297
7114
2343
4411
7518
5431
272
3362
3370
6791
5416
3771
3739

09
09
09
09
09
C9
G9
C9
09
09
(39
09
09
09
09
C9
09
09
09
09
C9
09
09
09
C9
C9
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
09

A M M O T O R S C O R P N A T L E C 0 N A G M T 4 S U P P S 7 4 «■ 75
A N C H O R H O C K I N G G L A S S C O L A N C A S T E R 11 L O C A L S
A S S O C G R O C E R S OF C O L O INC LU 4 5 2
A T L A N T I C S TEEL CO
B O E I N G CO V E R T O L DIV P 4 M LU 1069
CAMPBELL SOUP COMPANY LU 425
C L A R K EQ U I P CC LIMA DIV LU 106
CONSOL GAS SUPPLY CORP CLARKSBURG
CO N T S T E E L C O R P K O K O M O LU 36 0 1
C O N T I N E N T A L C A N C O INC G L A S S W A R E D I V 4 LU S
C O P P E R W E L D STEEL CO STEEL BAR DIV LU 2243
CTS C O R P E L K H A R T LU 941
C Y C L O P S C O R P S P E C I A L T Y S T E E L D IV
DE L A V A L T U R B I N E INC T R E N T O N L U 3 3 5 5
D R E S S E R I N D U S INC D R E S S E R C L A R K D I V
DUVAL SIERRITA CORP
F E D E R A L P A P E R B O A R D C O INC C O L U M B U S 6 L U S
GENL AM T R A N S P O R T A T I O N CORP
GREAT LAKES DREDGE + DOCK COMPANY
G R E A T E R C I N N M I L K 4 ICE C R E A M D E A L E R A S S N
HAMPTON ROADS SHIPPING ASSN
HUGHES TOOL CO OIL DIV HOUS T O N
I-A FILM P R O C E S S I N G LU 702
I-A M I L K D E A L E R S O F F C L E R 4 L A B D E P T S 3 L U S
I-A M I L K O E A L E R S PLT 4 S ALES D E P T S 3 LUS
I-A M I L K M F G 4 R E C E I V I N G P L T S
I-A S E C U R I T Y A G E N C I E S U P T O W N A G M T B A Y A R E A
I-A T W I N C I T Y C O M M E R C I A L P R I N T E R S L U 12
I-A U N I T E D C A N N E R Y 4 INDUS WK R S OF P A C I F I C
I-A W E S T E R N S T A T E S F I E L D C O N S T R A G M T 12 L U S
ILLUMINATING 4 ALLIED GLASSWARE MFRS ASSN
I N T E R C O INC E V A N S V I L L E F A C T O R Y
I N T E R C O INC ST C L A I R F A C T O R Y
I N T E R L A K E INC R I V E R D A L E P L A N T L U 1053
INTL H A R V E S T E R CO W I S C O N S I N STEEL WKS C H I C A G O
KOHL E R C O M P A N Y K O H L E R LU 833
KROGER CO H O U S T O N DIV LU 455
LACLEDE STEEL CO ALTON WORKS
MASS LEATHER MFRS ASSN
M C D O N N E L L D O U G L A S CORP LU 720
MCDONNELL DOUGLAS CORP DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT CO
M O B I L E S T E A M S H I P A S S N INC LU 14 1 0 4 141 0 1
M U R P H Y GW I N D U S T R I E S P E T R O L E U M M I N I N G DIV
NEW O R LEANS ST E A M S H I P ASSN 2 LUS
NEW ORLE A N S STEA M S H I P ASSN LU 854
NY S H I P P I N G A S S N PORT OF NEW Y O R K
O L I N C O R P 2 P L T S P I S G A H F O R E S T LU 1971
O N - S A L E L I Q U O R D E A L E R S OF M I N N INC 3 L U S
O W E N S - I L L I N O I S INC T O L E D O L I B B E Y P R O D U C T S
R O B E R T S H A W CONT R O L S CO NEW STANTON OIV
SO F L O R I D A H O T E L 4 M O T E L A S S N DA D E C O U N T Y
SOUTH ATLANTIC EMPLRS NEGOTIATING COMM
S TALEY A E MFG CO DECA T U R LU 837
VENDO CO KAN S A S CITY LU 4803
W E A N U N I T E D INC W E A N IND
W E I N G A R T E N J INC LU 4 5 5
W E S T G U L F M A R I T I M E A S S N INC 27 L US
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC P H O E N I X P L A N T
W H I R L P O O L C O R P FT S M I T H D I V L U 370

T o ta l:

9,600
2,500
1,200
1,100
7,000
1,100
i,100
1,750
1,550
2,800
1,950
1,500
1,850
1,100
1,300
1,200
1,600
3,000
1,500
1,100
1,900
1,950
2,150
4,000
3,000
2,000
3,500
1,200
4,000
6,000
1,000
3,250
6,250
2,500
3,450
3,450
1,800
2,000
1,400
4,500
14,800
2,000
1,150
5,000
1,000
21,000
1,500
3,950
1,100
1,000
10,000
1,050
1,600
1,050
2,000
3,600
12,000
1,500
2,000

35
10
32
37
16
20
44
35
78
20
20
20
73
27
20
16
32
31
31
33
33
34
54
33
31
37
37
44
35
44
44
44
26
58
32
38
70
44
20
35
35
54
44
36
36

31
00
00
31
54
74
20
23
00
00
93
41
93
00
31
33
43
33
33
35
74
33
14
93
00
63
74
72
72
00
56
41
31
23
59
58
33
43
31
74
70
86
71

553
137
531
335
553
155
553
500
335
137
335
553
335
335
335
600
137
335
129
101
239
335
192
531
600
531
500
243
186
112
137
188
334
335
500
553
184
335
356
218
553
239
335
239
239
239
231
145
137
335
145
239
107
335
335
184
239
346
107

26
33
33
37
37

63
00
23
21
00

231
335
335
218
218

35

86

l

1
1
1
1
1
1
1
4
1
4
1
1
4
4
2
2
1
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
2
1
1
1
1
1
4
1
2
4
4
2
1
2
2
2
4
2
1
1
2
2
1
1

4
4
2
1

1

59 a g r e e m e n t s ...................... 192, 400
O c to b e r

1268
2555
2509
4052
4056

10
10
10
1C
10




AM CAN CO N A H E O L A MILL LUS 950 952 4 966
AM S T E E L F O U N D R I E S L US 1063 1132 1206 4 2211
A R M O U R 4 CO B A L D W I N - L I M A - H A M I L T O N C O R P SUB
B ENDIX CORP EL E C T R I C A L C O M P O N E N T S DIV LU 1529
B O E I N G C O M P A N Y LUS 751 70 4 2061

1,500
3,000
1,950
1,950
20,500

1
4
1
1
4

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

October—
4063
2520
2633
3633
267
5791
5033
121C
622
637
6904
3315
2649
3302
23C1
22
9
4080
4081
2531
2619
264C
2946
4084
2650
3212
2315
4120
2124
2609
1228
5761
5426
3275
5249
2365
3310
3779
4173

1C
10
10
10
10
1C
10
1C
1C
1C
1C
10
10
10
10
1C
10
1C
10
10
1C
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
1C
10
IC
1C
10
10
10
10
10

NUM8-ER
OF
WORKERS

LOCATION1

UNIT

SIC

STATE

UNION

37
33
33
36
20
48
41
26
22
22
55
35
33
35
32
19
19
37
37
33
33
33
34
37
33
35
32
37
31
33
26
48
44
35
42
32
35
36
37

22
31
31
33
34
33
00
63
00
00
43
20
91
52
00
74
00
93
00
74
34
23
00
00
00
33
22
00
21
21
22
21
52
00
93
00
00
41
31

553
335
335
218
332
127
197
100
337
337
531
335
500
218
314
553
218
218
218
335
335
33 5
335
553
335
500
137
335
334
354
231
346
239
553
531
335
335
218
335

4
1
4
1
1
4
4
1
3
3
3
4
1
4
4
1
4
4
4
1
4
1
4
4
4
4
1
4
2
1
4
4
2
4
4
4
4
1
1

34
39
12
72
22
30
72
73
19
38
54
37
37
49
37
80
80
38
72
76
58
37
37
60
35
37
37
37
73
80

00
23
00
33
58
10
34
33
32
33
31
64
93
61
00
21
21
93
33
00
88
93
93
91
34
93
16
16
33
31

335
333
454
533
337
332
533
118
100
337
184
600
500
500
500
118
118
600
533
127
145
218
218
500
500
553
218
218
118
118

4
1
2
2
1
4
3
3
1
4
4
1
1
1
4
2
2
1
2
4
2
1
1
4
1
4
1
4
2
2

Continued

CURTISS-WRIGHT C0RP W00D-RIDGE ♦ W A L U N G T 0 N
C Y C L O P S C0 R P E M P I R E D E T R O I T S TEEL LU 169
DA Y T O N M A L L E A B L E IRON CO LUS 2654 ♦ 3664
F E DDERS CORP NORGE DIV LU 554
GENL FOODS CORP POST - CARTON ♦ CONTAINER
G E N L T E L E C O O F ILL SER C O N S T + S U P P L Y D E P T S
G R E Y H O U N D L I N E S INC N A T L C O U N C I L OF G R E Y H O U N D
GULF STATES PAPER CORP TUSCALOOSA
I-A D Y E + M A C H I N E P R I N T C O S
I-A S C R E E N P R I N T + S C R E E N M A K E R S
I-A S T A N D A R D A U T O M O T I V E S E R V I C E S T A T I O N A G M T
I N G E R S O L L - R A N D CO
INTALCO ALUMINUM CORP
K O P P E R S C O I N C M E T A L P R O D S D I V L 1 7 8 4 12
L I B B E Y - O W E N S - F O R D CO
L I N G - T E M C O - V O U G H T INC L T V A E R O S P A C E C O R P D I V
LOCKHEED AIRCRAFT CORP
LOCKHEED AIRCRAFT CORP LOCKHEED CALIF CO DIV
L O C K H E E D A I R C R F T CO R P L O C K H E E D G E O R G I A CO DIV
LON E STAR S T E E L CO LU 4 1 3 4
MCLOUTH STEEL CORP DETROIT
MESTA MACHINE CO WEST H O M E S T E A D
N A T L S T A N O A R D CO 5 LU
NOR T H AM R O C K W E L L C O R P
OHIO FERRO-ALLOYS CORP 4 PLTS P + M
O U T B O A R D MARINE CORP JOHN S O N O U T B O A R D S DIV
O W E N S - I L L I N O I S INC C O N S U M E R T E C H P R O D D IV
P U L L M A N INC P U L L M A N - S T A N O A R D 4 L U S
Q U A L I T Y S H O E M F R S A S S N INC + O T H S
R E V E R E C O P P E R ♦ B R A S S INC R O M E DIV LU 56
R I E G E L PAP E R C O R P NJ LU 712
ROCHESTER TELEPHONE CORP
S T E A M S H I P T R A O E A S S N O F B A L T I M O R E INC 6 L U S
T R W INC M A R L I N - R O C K W E L L DIV
U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E 10 L U S
US S T E E L C O R P US S U P P L Y D I V P ♦ M
W E A N U N I T E D INC U N I T E D E N G ♦ F D R Y C O
WH I T E C O N S O L I N D U S T R I E S INC F R A N K L I N M F G CO
YOU N G S T O W N STEEL DOOR CO
Total:

CODES2

2,150
1,250
2,100
1, 4 C 0
1,600
1,800
12,000
1,500
5,000
1,000
3,500
2,900
1,000
1,350
8,400
6,050
7,000
17,050
7,500
3,000
3,600
1,600
1,000
10,600
1,150
3,000
1,500
5,150
4,COO
1,350
1,000
1,500
5,000
1,800
1,600
1,000
2,050
1,000
1,150
.
1
6
4
,
600
4 4 a g r e e m e n t s .........
November

2945
4611
8313
7703
643
1925
7718
7976
27
4424
6748
4105
4082
6067
4067
7979
7939
4433
7704
7936
7116
4088
4089
7412
3299
4090
4137
4096
7977
7952

11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11




AM C H A I N ♦ C A B L E CO INC P+M 7 LUS
1,500
3,000
A R M S T R O N G CORK CO L A N C A S T E R FLOOR PLANT 285
BITUMINOUS COAL OPERATORS ASSOCIATION
80,000
3,000
C H I C A G O C L E A N E R S ASSN LU 46
F I E L D C R E S T M I L L S INC C O L U M B U S T O W E L D I V
1,250
F O S T E R G R A N T C O INC LU 60
1,000
I-A INDUS L A U N D R Y ♦ L I N E N S U P P L Y INDUS LU 129
1,600
I-A W A L K - U P A P A R T M E N T BL D G S LU 1
4,900
ICI A M I N C I N D I A N A A R M Y A M M U N I T I O N P L T 2 L U S
3,000
JOHNSON ♦ JO H N S O N C H I C A G O LU 1437
1,300
1,850
KRO G E R CO
L O C A L S 1 0 5 9 31 ♦ 1 5 5 2
L I T T O N S Y S T E M S INC I N G A L L S N U C L E A R S H P B L D G D
5,000
LOCKHEED AIRCRAFT CORP LOCKHEED CALIF CO DIV
3,200
LOUISVILLE GAS + ELECTRIC CO LOUISVILLE
2,750
MCDONNELL DOUGLAS CORP
4,250
M E T R O NY N U R S I N G H O M E A S S N INC L PN LU 144
1,250
M E T R O NY N U R S I N G H O M E A S S N INC LU 1 4 4
6,500
PHARMSEAL LABORATORIES
1,100
P R O F E S S I O N A L L A U N D R Y INST OF C H I C A G O L A N O
4,500
RCA CORP RCA SERVICE CO DIV INTER
3,250
RENO EMPLOYERS COUNCIL LAKE TAHOE RESORT
1,200
R OHR COR P LU 755
2,200
R O H R INDUS INC R I V E R S I O E LU 9 6 4
1,100
SEATTLE-FIRST NATL BANK SEATTLE ♦ VIC
3,300
T E C U M S E H P R O O S CO
3,000
T E L E D Y N E INDUSTRIES INC LU 506
1,200
UNITED AIRCRAFT CORP PRATT ♦ WHITNEY AIRCRAFT
2,550
UNITED AIRCRAFT CORP PRATT ♦ WHITNEY AIRCRAFT
11,500
VOLUNTARY HI-RISE LAB NEGOTIATING COMM
2,000
YOUNGSTOWN HOSPITAL ASSN
1,100
Total: 30 a g r e e m e n t s ........ .. 163, 3 50

AGREE­
MENT
NG.

COMPANY AND L O C A T I O N 1

EXP.
DATE

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES“
SIC

| STATE

UNI ON

UNIT

Decem ber
1602
844
7400
838
7126
4055
256
330
1455
7503
1402
8888
8661
388
8861
8586
2916
3647
7414
7410
4410
3346
3663
2127
2116

12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12

AM C Y A N A M I D CO B O U N D B R O O K LU 111
AM M I L L I N E R Y M F R S A S S N INC L U S 24 4 2 ♦ 90
AM N A T •L I N S U R A N C E CO
A S S O C C O R S E T ♦ B R A S S I E R E M F R S I N C L U S 10 + 32
B O B S B I G B O Y INC I N T R A S T A T E C A L I F
B O E I N G CO
C A M P B E L L SOUP C O M P A N Y LU 194
C A R N A T I O N C O M A S T E R A G M T C E N T R A L S T A T E S 10 LU
CHICAGO NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSN 5 COS 706
C I N N H O T E L S A S S N INC
I— A B O S T O N D A I L Y N E W S P A P E R L U 1 3
I-A H E A V Y E N G
RR C O N T R G + HWY C O N S T AG M T
I— A N A T L T R A N S I E N T M E M B E R S
L Y K E S P A S C O P A C K I N G C O LU 4 3
METRO MARINE CONTRS ASSN CONTR-MAINT-REPAIR
METRO MARINE MAINTENANCE SHIP MAINTENANCE
MFRS INDUS RELS ASSN
N Y L A M P ♦ S H A D E M F R S A S S N INC LU 3
R E A L T Y A D V I S O R Y BO ON L A B O R R A L S INC L U 3 2 J
R E A L T Y A D V I S O R Y BO ON L A B R E L S INC C O M M B L D G
RCBERTSHAW CONTROLS CO GRAYSON D LONG BEACH
S E E B U R G C ORP OF OEL S E E B U R G P R O O S D IV LU 743
S T E W A R T - W A R N E R C O R P C H I C A G O LU 1031
T A N N E R S AS S N OF F U L T O N C O U N T Y INC LU 1712
W E Y E N B E R G SH O E M FG CO M I L W A U K E E LU 170

To tal:

1,600
3,500
3,100
35,000
2,500
8,400
1,700
1,200
1,300
1,300
1,000
4,750
6,000
1,400
2,000
2,500
4,000
2,500
3,000
13,000
1,200
1,100
3,050
1,000
1,300

28
23
63
23
58
37
20
20
27
70
27
16
17
20
17
17
34
36
65
65
38
35
37
31
31

22
21
00
21
93
00
33
00
33
31
14
23
00
59
20
21
00
21
21
21
93
33
33
21
35

121
142
238
134
500
500
332
531
531
100
204
143
112
332
239
239
161
127
118
118
553
531
127
305
188

1
2
4
2
1
4
1
4
2
2
3
3
3
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
1
4
2
4

25 a g r e e m e n t s ............ . . . 107, 400

A G R E E M E N T S , t o t a l .......... 81 8; WO RK ERS , t o t a l ____ . 3 , 5 7 2 , 1 5 0

1 See a p p e n d i x A f o r a b b r e v i a t i o n s .
2 See a p p e n d i x B f o r d e fi n i t i o n s of c o d e s .
3 S e ttle d e a r l y .
N O T E : D a ta b a s e d
governm ent ag reem en ts.




on a g r e e m e n t s on f il e w it h th e B u r e a u of L a b o r S t a t i s t i c s ,

e x c l u d in g r a i l r o a d s

a i r l i n e s an d

AGREEMENT
NO.

CODES2

NUMBER

COMPANY AND L O C A T I O N 1

EXP •
DATE

OF
UNION

U N IT

S IC

STATE

1,100
1,450
2,200
2,400
2,650
2,200
1,800
2,350
2,450
1,200

1C
10
10
10
1C
10
10
10
10
10

86
84
86
34
00
00
00
41
41
86

335
357
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
600

1
1
l
4
4
4
4
4
1
1

80,000

12

00

454

2

14
14

93
93

531
129

2
2

15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15

74
40
40
16
34
59
62
62
50
00
59
72
34
00
72
62
43
43
93
23
00
43
50
23
22
34
88
34
34
34
34
34
91
00
91
10
73
21
46
00
34
62
94
94
93
93
31
31
74
93

119
143
531
129
143
119
600
143
119
119
143
143
129
143
600
119
143
531
143
143
119
119
119
119
115
143
119
129
143
116
531
119
143
119
119
143
119
119
143
119
119
119
100
531
600
531
119
143
119
143

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

WORKERS

M e ta l m in in g
8322
8311
8320
8308
83C0
8321
8319
8324
8301
8331

C6
07
C7
07
08
C8
C8
08
08
C9

I N S P I R A T I O N C O N S O L C O P P E R C O LU 586
AM M E T A L C L I M A X INC C L I M A X M O L Y B D E N U M C O D I V
MAGMA C O P P E R CO SAN MA N U E L DIV LU 937
WHITE PINE COPPER CO
C L E V E C L I F F S I R O N C O M I C H + M I N N D I S T 33
0IAM0ND SHAMROCK CORP
HANNA MINING CO ♦ 3 OTHERS
R E S E R V E M I NING CO LUS 4 7 5 7 ♦ 5296
US S T E E L C O R P M I N N ORE O P E R S + S A L A R I E D EM P L R
DUVAL SIERRITA CORP

Total:

10 a g r e e m e n t s ....................... 19, 800

B i t u m i n o u s coal and l ig n ite m in i n g
8313

11

BITUMINOUS

8318
8329

08
08

ROCK
ROCK

COAL

OPERATORS

ASSOCIATION

Total:

1 a g r e e m e n t . ......................... 8 0 , 0 0 0

M in in g an d q u a r r y i n g of n o n m e t a l l i c m i n e r a l s , e x c e p t f u e ls
PROD ♦ READY M I X E D C O N C R E T E EMPLRS S CAL
PROOS + READY MIX C O N C R E T E EMPLOYERS

Total:

2,200
1,050

2 a g r e e m e n t s ........................... 3, 250

B u ild in g c o n s t r u c t i o n —g e n e r a l c o n t r a c t o r s
8616
8624
8435
8593
8742
8743
8698
8639
8621
8779
8881
8787
8656
8641
8418
8454
8415
8842
8640
8717
8608
8815
8875
8870
8457
8461
8427
8655
8416
8712
8823
8666
8649
8407
8406
8404
8629
8774
8419
8459
8460
8625
8597
8858
8417
8411
8623
8650
8619
8403

03
C3
03
03
03
04
04
04
C4
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
C4
04
04
04
04
C4
04
04
C4
05
05
05
05
C5
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06




A G C C F A M S A N A N T O N I O C H P T R L U 14
B L D R S AS S N OF K A N S A S CI T Y MO A ND KANS
B L D R S A S S N OF K A N S A S C I T Y LU 541
CON N C O N S T R INDUS
A S S N INC L U 4 7 8
MICH DISTRIBUTION CONTRS ASSN
AGC FLOR I D A WEST C O A S T CHPT 7 LUS
AGC KN O X V I L L E CHPTR
AGC K N O X V I L L E CHPTR LU 818
AGC NE FLA CH P T R
A G C OF AM C H A T T A N O O G A C H P T 6 L U S
A G C OF AM F L A W C O A S T C H P T R 3 L U S
AG C OF AM INC L A K E C H A R L E S C H P T LU 207
A G C CF AM INC M I C H C H A P L U 3 2 4 A - B - C - 0
AGC OF AM M E M P H I S T E N N LU 1441
AGC OF AM N EW O R L E A N S
AGC TENN CHPTR
A S S O C G E N L C O N T R S ♦ SIT E IMPR A S S N B H + H ST LO
ASSOC GENL CONTRS OF MISSOURI
C C N T R P L A S T E R E R S A S S N O F SO C A L I F INC
G E N L B L D G C O N T R S A S S N INC
GE N L C O N T R S A S S N OF L O U I S V I L L E
I N DIANA + KY
H O M E B L D R S A S S N OF G R E A T E R ST LO U I S
I— A C A R P E N T E R S G E N L C O N T R A C T I N G A G M T
KEYSTONE BLDG CONTRS ASSN ♦ SUB CONTRS
NJ M A S O N C O N T R S A S S N INC
SCUTHW MICH CONTRS ASSN ♦ 1 OTH
AGC NEV CHAP ♦ 2 OTHS SO NEV 4 LUS
AGC OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R LU 3 2 4 - A - B - C
AGC CF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R ♦ 1 OTH
AGC CF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R IRON W K R S LU 25
A G C OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R INC 3 L U S
AGC OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R
A G C OF AM INC ♦ 3 C H P T R S
AGC OF AM I N LAND EMP I R E C H A P H W Y - H V Y
AG C OF AM W E S T E R N - C E N T R A L A R E A
AGC OF M ASS INC ♦ 1 O T H 18 L US
ASSOC GENL C ONTRS O K L A H O M A CHPT BLDRS OIV
CON S T R E M P LOYERS LABOR R E L A T I O N S ASSN OF NY
O M A H A B LDG CO N T R S E M P L R S A S S N LU 1140
QUAD-CITY BUILDERS ASSN 9 LUS
S O U T H W M I C H C O N T R S A S S N «• 1 O T H 6 L U S
WEST TENN CONSTR INDUS COLLECTIVE BARG GROUP
AGC OF AM A L A S K A C H A P T E R
AGC OF AM A L A S K A C HAP LU 959
AGC OF AM SAN D I E G O C H P T R ♦ 2 O T H S
A G C OF SO C A L I F ♦ 2 O T H
A SSOC B L D G C O N T R S OF N O R T H W E S T E R N O H I O INC
A S S O C B L D G C O N T R S O F N O R T H W E S T E R N O H I O INC
ASSOC GENL CONTRS HOUSTON CHPTR
A S S O C G E N L C O N T R S A N D 3 O T H S SO C A L I F CH P T

1,000
3,000
1,650
2,500
1,000
2,550
1,500
1,400
2,000
1,600
3,250
1,200
2,200
1,000
9,650
1,500
3,000
1,500
2,000
8,500
1,400
4,650
2,050
3,000
1,000
1,200
1,800
3,200
8,000
2,500
4,000
15,000
7,000
3,000
15,000
10,000
1,600
1,600
1,500
1,000
1,600
2,000
5,700
5,000
9,150
4,000
1,800
1,400
6,000
20,000

AGREE­
MENT

EXP.

COMPANY AND L O C A T I O N 1

DATE

NO.

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES 2
SIC

STATE

UNI ON

UNI

B uil din g c o n s t r u c t i o n —g e n e r a l c o n t r a c t o r s —C o n ti n u e d
8413
8817
8895
8401
8402

06
06
06
06
06

A S S O C G E N L C 0 N T R S ♦ 2 0 T H S SO C A L I F 3
I— A L I N C L N W A R R E N M 0 N T G M R Y + S T C H A S C 0 N T R S
I— A N O C E N T R A L T E X A S L A B O R E R S C 0 N T R S L U 6 4 8
I-A SO C A L I F G E N L C 0 N T R S
ER S SO C A L I F
I— A S O C A L I F G E N L C O N T R S
SO C A L I F

T o t a l:

23,000
1,500
2,500
25,000
10,000

93
43
74
93
93

129
119
143
119
168

2
3
3
3
3

16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16

22
22
21
21
21
21
21
23
40
40
40
40
16
23
23
23
00
23
32
00
00
14
93
00
00
93
87
00
00
23

143
143
531
119
129
115
143
129
531
143
129
600
531
143
129
119
129
143
531
129
600
143
119
143
600
129
143
129
112
143

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
4
3
3

17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17

85
72
72
14
43
21
93
23
90
21
20
34
34
00
33
14
34
34
34
43
34
34
34
43
34
91
93
35
34
33
94

170
143
119
115
119
115
115
119
170
127
187
115
100
119
116
143
116
129
119
170
170
170
127
127
164
164
127
187
187
187
119

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

15
15
15
15
15

55 a g r e e m e n t s ............... .. .,259, 150

C o n s t r u c t i o n o t h e r t h a n b u ild in g c o n s t r u c t i o n —g e n e r a l c o n t r a c t o r s
8659
8859
8709
8710
8711
8716
8470
884C
8878
8495
8496
8876
8483
8813
8808
8810
8477
8801
8478
8469
8729
8482
8490
8465
8491
8468
8464
8773
8493
8688

C2
C2
G3
03
03
G3
03
03
03
03
03
03
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
05
05
05
06
06
06
06
06
09
09
12

A S S O C G E N L C O N T R S OF NJ LU 4 7 2 AN D 172
U T I L I T Y C O N T R S A S S N O F NJ L U S 4 7 2 A N D 172
A G C N Y S T A T E C H P T R I N C 11 L O C A L S
A GC OF AM N Y S TATE C H P T R 46 LUS
AGC OF AM N Y STATE CH P T R 4 LUS
AG C OF AM NY S T A T E C H A P INC H V Y + H W Y C O N S T R
A G C O F A M N Y S T A T E C H P T R I N C 19 L U S
CONSTRUCTORS ASSN OF WESTERN PENN
H E A V Y C O N S T R U C T O R S AS S N OF G R E A T E R K A N S A S CTY
HEAVY C O N S T R U C T O R S ASSN OF GREA T E R KANSAS
H E A V Y C O N S T R U C T O R S ASSN OF G R E A T E R K A N S A S
H E A V Y C O N T R S A S S N INC N E B R A S K A ♦ IOWA
C O N N C O N S T I N D U S A S S N I N C 5 L U S J O I N T C N C L 64
C O N T R S A S S N OF E PA H V Y - H W Y C O N S T R 5 C N T Y
C O N T R S A S S N OF E PA 5 C N T Y 3 L U S
C O N T R S A S S N OF E PA H V Y - H W Y C O N S T R
G E N L B L D G C O N T R S A S S N INC L U S 5 4 2 5 4 2 A + 5 4 2 B
GENL CONTRS ASSN LEHIGH VALLEY GENL-SUB— CONTR
I N D I A N A H I G H W A Y C O N S T R U C T O R S INC
AGC OF AM I N L A N D E M P I R E C H P T R W A S H + ID A H O
ASSOC GENL CONTRS IDAHO BRANCH CONSTR TRADES
NEW ENG ROAD BUILDERS ASSN MASS
AGC OF AM C E N T R A L ♦ NO C ALIF
AGC OF AM I N L A N D E M P I R E C H P T R W A S H ♦ IDAHO
AGC OF AM MOB I L E CHPTR
AGC OF AM N O R T H E R N C A L I F
AGC OF AM U T A H C H P T R
GREAT LAKES DREDGE ♦ DOCK COMPANY
I-A W E S T E R N S T A T E S F I E L D C O N S T R AGMT 12 LUS
I-A H E A V Y E NG
RR C O N T R G ♦ HW Y CON S T A G M T

T o t a l:

5,000
1,000
2,000
2,000
1,000
1,950
15,300
5,000
2,500
2,000
1,400
3,GOO
1,800
3,250
5,000
1,000
6,800
4,950
1,400
2,500
4,000
5,000
1,200
2,500
7,000
9,000
2,500
1,500
6,000
4,750

30 a g r e e m e n t s ................. , . 112, 300

C o n s t r u c t i o n —s p e c i a l t r a d e c o n t r a c t o r s
8669
8689
8562
8678
8565
8546
8554
8569
8894
8534
8572
8555
6693
8566
8580
8851
8799
8657
8571
8854
85C7
8677
8528
8533
8524
8522
8538
8869
8747
8609
8564

03
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
06




M E C H A N I C A L C O N T R S A S S N OF N E W M E X I C O INC
A GC O F AM B A T O N R O U G E C H P T R LU 1177
AGC OF AM B A T O N R O U G E LU 1098
A GC OF M A S S INC ♦ 6 O T H S 7 L U S S
A S S O C G E N L C O N T R S O F ST L O U I S ♦ 1 O T H
BLDG T R A D E S EM P L R S ASSN M A S O N C O N T R S 7 LUS
CAL I F C O N F OF MASON C O N T R ASS N L A C NTY L 2
G E N L B L D G C O N T R S A SSN INC
I-A H E A T I N G P R E S S U R E P I P E P I P E F AB LU 235
NA T L E LEC C O N T R S INC N A S S A U ♦ S U F F O L K C H A P T E R
R O O F I N G ♦ S H E E T M E T A L C O N T R S A S S N L U 19
AGC OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R ♦ 2 OTHS
AGC OF AM D E T R O I T C H P T R ♦ 1 O T H 3 LUS
AGC OF O H I O C I N N DIV DIS T C O U N C I L
A S S O C S T E E L E R E C T O R S OF C H I C A G O LU 1
B L D G T R A D E S E M P L R S A S S N O F W E S T E R N M A S S INC
G R E A T L A K E S F A B R I C A T O R S ♦ E R E C T O R S A S S N L U 25
GREAT LAKES FABRICATORS ♦ ERECTORS ASSN
I-A M I L L W R I G H T C O N V E Y O R ♦ M A C H I N E E R E C T O R
M E C H C O N T R S A S S N OF ST L O U I S MO INC L U 562
M E T R O D E T R O I T P L U M B C O N T R A S S N INC ♦ 1 O T H
METRO DETROIT PLUMBING ♦ MECHANICAL CONTRS
N E C A O F D E T R O I T S O U T H E M I C H L U 58
N E C A ST L O U I S C H A P T L U 1
P A I N T I N G ♦ D E C O R A T I N G C O N T R S O F A M INC OC 22
PAINTING DECORATING CONTRS NW DRYWALL CONTR
SAN F R A N E LEC C O N T R S A S S N INC INSIDE W I R E M E N
SHEET METAL ♦ AIR C O N O G CONTRS ASSN M I L W LU24
SHEET M E T A L E M P L R S ASS N OF D E T R O I T LU 80
V E N T I L A T I N G ♦ A IR C O N D I T G C O N T R S ♦ 2 O T H S 73
AGC OF AM ALA S K A CHPT 5 LUS

1,000
2,000
2,100
1,300
3,100
1,600
1,400
7,200
1,050
2,000
1,500
5,500
5,900
3,100
2,650
2,000
2,500
2,300
1,100
1,400
3,500
2,200
3,500
2,250
3,200
2,500
1,200
1,200
1,700
5,700
1,800

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

LOCATION1

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES2
UNION

UNIT

SIC

STATE

17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17

93
93
93
93
34
93
00
93
93
21
93
93
93
93
93
21
93
21
00
20
21

119
143
168
170
115
170
116
143
170
127
164
164
164
164
170
119
187
164
112
239
239

2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
Z
2
2
2
2
2
3
2
2

19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19

21
72
35
35
16
74
00
32

500
121
101
553
218
553
218
100

1
1
1
1
4
l
4
1

20
20
20
20
20

23
21
20
95
21
95
93
22
41
22
91
93
93
50
23
34
54
93
23
33
21
23
21
33
54
30
33
93
00
20
93
00
33
00
93
93
93

155
108
108
480
108
480
126
155
531
155
531
531
531
600
155

1
4
3
3
3
2
3
1
4
1
2
1
2
2
1
3
1
2
1
2
1
2
3
3
1
2
1
1
4
2
2
4
1
3
2
3
4

C o n s t r u c t i o n —s p e c i a l t r a d e c o n t r a c t o r s — C o n tin u e d
8561
8542
8543
8504
8549
8877
8582
8553
8684
8537
8518
8527
8706
8516
8513
8871
8503
8515
8661
8861
8586

06
06
06
06
C6
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
07
12
12
12

AGC OF AM BAY AREA
AGC OF AM C E N T R A L + NO C A L I F
A G C OF AM C E N T R A L ♦ N O C A L I F
AGC OF C A L I F + l O T H INDUS ♦ GENL P I P E F I T T I N G
DETROIT MASON CONTRS ASSN DETROIT CHPT
I N D U S C O N T R S U M I C I N C L U 36
IRON WORK E R E M P L O Y E R S OF C A L I F O R N I A
M A S O N C O N T R S A S S N INC L O S A N G E L E S 7 L U S
M E C H C O N T R S C O U N C I L OC C E N T R A L C A L I F D I S T 36
NY E L E C T R I C A L C O N T R S A S S N INC ♦ 2 O T H S L 3
P A I N T I N G ♦ D E C O R A T I N G C O N T R S A S S N LA
PAINT I N G ♦ D E C O R A T I N G C ONTRS ASSN SAN DIEGO
P A I N T I N G ♦ D E C O R A T I N G C O N T R S A S S N O F SF INC
PEN I N S U L A AREA P A I NTERS AND D E C O R A T I N G CONTRS
PLUMBING-HEATING ♦ PIPING EMPLYS COUNCIL
R O C K L A N D CNTY C A R P E N T E R C O N T R S ASSN INC 964
SHEET METAL ♦ AIR C O N D C O N T R S NATL ASSN
A S S N OF M A S T E R P A I N T E R S ♦ D E C O R S OF N Y C INC
I-A N A T L T R A N S I E N T M E M B E R S
METRO MARINE CONTRS ASSN CONTR-MAINT-REPAIR
METRO MARINE MAINTENANCE SHIP MAINTENANCE

T o t a l:

27,000
14,350
3,800
2 , 50C
3,500
2,150
12,000
1,000
2,200
10,000
8,000
4,000
6,000
2,500
9,000
1,050
1,100
1C,000
6,000
2,000
2,500

52 a g r e e m e n t s ............... . . 210, 100

O r d n a n c e and a c c e s s o r i e s
17
34
29
25
16
22
9
27

01
C2
03
05
07
10
U
11

R E M I N G T O N A R M S CO INC ILION
S P E R R Y R A N D C O R P L O U I S I A N A A R M Y A M M U N I T I O N PL
OLIN CORP ENERGY SYSTEMS DIV BARABOO
F M C C O R P N O R T H E R N O R D O I V F R I D L E Y LU 6 8 3
OLIN CORP NEW HAVEN LU 609
L I N G - T E M C O - V O U G H T INC L T V A E R O S P A C E C O R P DI V
LOCKHEED AIRCRAFT CORP
ICI A M I N C I N D I A N A A R M Y A M M U N I T I O N P L T 2 L U S

Total:

1,750
1,650
1,700
2,500
1,700
6,050
7,000
3,000

8 a g r e e m e n t s .................. . . . 25, 350

F o o d an d k i n d r e d p r o d u c t s
375
247
286
262
280
300
297
380
382
255
349
365
228
376
259
315
364
224
305
225
383
230
234
340
304
274
377
295
265
215
289
291
385
279
323
233
374

01
Cl
01
01
01
01
C2
02
€2
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
04
04
04
04
04
04
05
05
06
06
06
06
07
07
07
07
08
08




AM H O M E F O O D S INC L U 38
B E E C H NUT INC C A N A J O H A R I E + FT P L A I N P L A N T S
I-A B A K E R I E S GR NY LU 3
I-A P I N E A P P L E C O M P A N I E S F A C T O R Y ♦ P L A N T A T I O N S
I - A R E T A I L W H O L E S A L E A G M T N Y C L U 51
S U G A R C O S N E G O T I A T I N G C O M M I T T E E L U 142
I - A B E E T S U G A R C O S 4 10 L U S
S E A 8 R 0 0 K F A R M S INC LU 5 6
S T O K E L Y VAN C A M P INC F A I R M O N T A N D W I N N E B A G O
C A M P B E L L SOUP CO C A M D E N LU P-80
DAIRY EMPLRS LABOR COUNCIL MASTER + SUPPS
DAIRY INDUSTRY INDUS RELS ASSN MASTER OFF
D A I R Y I N D U S T R Y IND RE L A S S N SO C A L I F D A I R Y
D E L M A R V A PO U L T R Y P R O C E S S O R S ASS N MD ♦ DEL
HEINZ H J CO HEINZ USA DIV LU 325 PITTSBURGH
I-A D E T R O I T B R E W E R I E S D E T R O I T 2 LUS
ITT C O N T I N E N T A L B A K I N G C O L U 29
NO CAL I F DAIRY ASSN 6 LUS
P E T INC W H I T M A N C H O C O L A T E S D I V P H I L A D E L P H I A
A S S O C M I L K D E A L E R S INC
G R E A T A + P TEA CO INC A N N P A G E DIV LU 62
G R E A T E R PITTS MILK D E A L E R S A S S N LU 205
I - A ICE C R E A M I N D U S T R Y A G R E E M E N T LU 7 5 7
I-A ME A T D R I V E R S C H I C A G O LU 710
S T A N D A R D B R A N D S INC P L A N T E R S P E A N U T S S U F F O L K
CHI B A K E R Y E M P L O Y E R S LAB O R C O U N C I L
O S C A R M A Y E R ♦ CO C H I C A G O LU 100
CALIF + HAWAIIAN SUGAR CO CROCKETT
C PC I N T E R N A T I O N A L INC C O R N I N D U S T R I A L DIV
M E A T T R A D E S I N S T I T U T E INC LU 174
WHOLESALE BAKERS GROUP 9 LUS
AM CRYSTAL SUGAR CO-SUGAR DIV
B R A C H E J ♦ SON S INC LU 738
I-A P H I L A D E L P H I A BAKERY E M P L O Y E R S L 4 6 3 ♦ 676
WINERY EMPLOYERS ASSN
I-A F L U I D M I L K ♦ ICE C R E A M A G R E E M E N T
R A L S T O N PURINA CO VA N CAMP SEA FOOD DIV

1,450
1,050
4,000
7,000
1,500
9,000
2,900
1,200
1,900
2,550
1,600
7,500
7,000
1,000
2,300
1,100
1,200
2,450
1,000
1,800
1,500
1,400
1,400
2,000
1,500
1,200
1,150
1,100
3,000
5,000
1,300
2,300
2,800
1,750
1,500
2,500
1,250

20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20

531
531
531
108
531
531
531
531
531
423
108
155
186
357
155
531
208
531
531
126
531
186

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
0ATE

COMPANY

AND

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

LOCATION1

CODES 2
SIC

STATE

UNION

UNIT

F o o d a nd k i n d r e d p r o d u c t s —C on ti n u e d
372
337
390
237
336
249
272
267
256
330
388

09
09
09
09
09
09
09
10
12
12
12

CA M P B E L L SOUP C O MPANY LU 425
G R E A T E R C I N N M I L K ♦ ICE C R E A M D E A L E R A S S N
I— A M I L K D E A L E R S O F F C L E R + L A B D E P T S 3 L U S
I— A M I L K D E A L E R S P L T + S A L E S D E P T S 3 L U S
I— A M I L K M F G ♦ R E C E I V I N G P L T S
I-A U N I T E D C A N N E R Y + INDUS W K R S OF P A C I F I C
S T A L E Y A E M FG C O D E C A T U R LU 8 3 7
GENL FOODS CORP POST - CARTON ♦ CONTAINER
C A M P B E L L SOUP CO M P A N Y LU 194
C A R N A T I O N C O M A S T E R A G M T C E N T R A L S T A T E S 10 L U
LYKES PAS C O PACK I N G CO LU 43

T o t a l:

1*100
1,100
4,000
3,000
2,000
4,000
1,600
1,600
1,700
1,200
1,400

20
20

71
31
23
00
00
93
33
34
33
CO
59

155
101
531
600
531
186
107
332
332
531
332

1
2
3
3
3
3
1
1
1
4
1

21
21
21
21
21
21
21

50
54
61
56
61
50
56

203
203
203
203
203
203
203

4
4
1
1
1
4
1

22
22
22
22
22
22
22
22

23
57
56
22
56
00
00
58

337
337
202
337
337
337
337
337

1
1
4
1
1
3
3
1

00
60
21
21
21
93
21
21

305
305
305
142
142
134
142
134

2
4
2
2
3
2
2
2

93

119

25
25
25
25
25
25

54
00
93
93
93
21

119
205
100
119
100
312

1
4
2
2
2
2

26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26

93
90
35
35
59
35
63
58
12

244

2
4
4
4
1
1
1
1
4

20
20
20
20
20

20
20
20

20

48 a g r e e m e n t s ............... . . 114, 850

Tobacco m anufactures
502
508
507
506
5C3
512
504

Cl
Cl
01
02
03
03
03

AM T O B A C C O C O LUS 182 183 A N D 192
PHILIP MORRIS USA RICHMOND 203
P H I L I P M O R R I S U S A L O U I S V I L L E L U 16
LOEWS CO R P LO R I L L A R D DIV G R E E N S 8 0 R 0 LU 317
BROWN AND WILLIAMSON TOBACCO CORP LOUISVILLE
BROWN AND WILLIAMSON TOBACCO CORP
L I G G E T T AND M Y E R S INC D U R H A M LU 176

Total:

4,200
3,200
2,400
2,300
4,350
3,400
2,200

7 a g r e e m e n t s ................. . . . 22, 050

Textile m ill products
625
623
604
636
609
6 22
637
643

03
04
05
06
07
10
10
11

1,150
2,500
1,300
1,000
2,150
5,000
1,000
1,250

MAGEE CARPET CO BLOOMSBURG
R O C K H I L L P R I N T I N G ♦ F I N I S H I N G CO
E R W I N M I L L S INC D U R H A M LU 257
C A D I L L A C W A R P I N G ♦ S I Z I N G C O LU 75
C ONE M I L L S C O R P W H I T E OAK P L A N T LU 1391
I-A D Y E * M A C H I N E P R I N T C O S
I-A S C R E E N P R I N T ♦ S C R E E N M A K E R S
F I E L D C R E S T M ILLS INC C O L U M B U S T O W E L DIV

Total:

8 a g r e e m e n t s .......... .......... 1 5 , 3 5 0

A p p a r e l and o t h e r f i n i s h e d p r o d u c t s m a d e f r o m f a b r i c s a nd s i m i l a r m a t e r i a l s
8GC
866
802
845
887
814
844
838

05
C5
05
06
06
07
12
12

C L O T H I N G MF R S A SSN OF THE US OF AM
M E R I T C L O T H I N G CO INC KY A N D T E N N
U N I F O R M M A N U F A C T U R E R S E X C H A N G E INC
EMPIRE STATE CLOTH ♦ CAP MFRS LU 2
I-A IND S H O P S C L O T H H A T S ♦ C A P S LU 2
C A L I F S P O R T S W E A R + D R E S S A S S N INC
AM M I L L I N E R Y M F R S A S S N INC L U S 24 4 2 ♦ 90
A S S O C C O R S E T ♦ B R A S S I E R E M F R S INC L U S 10 ♦

Total:

32

125,000
1,500
1,000
1,000
1,650
1,350
3,500
35,000

23
23
23
23
23
23
23
23

8 a g r e e m e n t s ............... . 170, 000

L u m b e r and w ood p r o d u c t s , e x c e p t f u r n i t u r e
1110

LUMBER

+

MILL

EMPLRS

ASSN 4

T o t a l:

LUS

1 a g r e e m e n t, ,

2*300

2, 300

F u r n i t u r e a nd f i x t u r e s
1130
1102
1111
1118
1104
1106

01
03
04
06
06
08

B A S I C - W I T Z F U R N I T U R E I N D U S T R I E S INC 2 LUS
K R O E H L E R M F G C O 11 L U S
STORE FIXT U R E ♦ A R C H I T E C T U R A L W D WORK INST
INDUS R E L S C O U N C I L OF F U R N M F R S SO C A L I F
SO C A L I F A S S N O F C A B I N E T M F R S
U P H O L S T E R E D F U R N M FRS A S S N LU 76

T ota l:

1,050
2,700
1,200
1,200
2,400
1,500

6 a g r e e m e n t s .................... . 1 0 , 0 5 0

P a p e r and a l l i e d p r o d u c t s
1291
1021
1271
1200
1212
1217
1261
1240
1204

03
03
04
04
05
05
05
05
06




WEST COAST ENVELOPE EMPLRS COUNCIL CALIF
WEYERHAEUSER CO 5 MILLS 6 LUS
C H A R M I N P A P E R P R O D U C T S CO
C C N S O L P A P E R S INC ♦ C O N S O W E L D C O R P 9 L US
H U D S O N P U L P *■ P A P E R C O R P
K I M B E R L Y C L A R K C ORP N E E N A H MILL LU 4 6 7 ♦ 482
SCOTT PAPER CO SOUTHERN OPERATIONS
UN I O N C A M P C O R P S A V A N N A H P LANT 3 LUS
B R O W N C O ♦ B R O W N N E W H A M P S H I R E INC LU 75

1,300
2,100
1,400
3,300
1,600
1,300
1,850
3,000
1,550

527
100
100
100
231
100
100
231

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

LOCATION1

CODES2

U N IT

SIC

STATE

UN IO N

26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26

72
00
11
71
11
23
23
34
35
54
00
20
56
63
63
22

IOC
231
231
231
100
231
231
231
231
100
231
231
231
231
100
231

4
4
1
1
4
1
2
l
1
1
4
3
4
1
1
4

27
27
27
27
27
27
27
27
27
27
27
27
27

21
21
53
33
41
35
21
33
31
34
41
33
14

243

204
243
243
243
531
204

2
2
1
2
3
2
2
2
1
1
3
2
3

28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28

21
62
31
22
21
22
42
55
91
62
34
32
00
23
54
22
74
31
14
34
22

121
500
500
423
121
500
500
121
100
202
335
357
121
314
357
357
100
335
347
357
121

1
1
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
4
4
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
1
4
1

29

74

500

4

30
30
30
30
30

56
31
31
00
10

333
333
347
135
332

P a p e r and a l l i e d p r o d u c t s —C o n tin u e d
1238
1259
1225
1266
1209
1211
1265
1290
1231
1281
1277
1286
1297
1268
1210
1228

06
06
C6
06
C6
06
06
06
07
C7
07
08
09
10
10
1C

CCNT CAN CO PLANTS 528 ♦ 536 H ODGE
C O N T A I N E R C 0 R P OF AM LUS 250 2 5 8 392 4 9 8 8C7
E T H Y L C 0 R P O X F O R D P A P E R CO D R U M F 0 R D LU 90C
GEORGIA-PACIFIC C0RP CRQSSETT DIV-PAPER
GRE A T N O R T H E R N PAP E R CO 2 M I L L I N 0 C K E T MILLS
H A M M E R M I L L PAPER CO ERIE DIV LU 620
P H I L A D E L P H I A C O N T A I N E R A S S N LU 375
S C O T T P A P E R CO SD W A R R E N D I V C E N T R A L M I L L
H A M M E R M I L L PAPER CO T H I L M A N Y PULP + P A P E R DIV
UNION CAMP FRANKLIN
W E S T V A C O H«-D C O N T A I N E R D I V 8 L O C S
I— A C O R R U G A T E D B O X I N D L U 3 8 1
O L I N C O R P 2 P L T S P I S G A H F O R E S T LU 1971
AM C A N CO N A H E O L A M I L L LUS 9 50 952 ♦ 9 6 6
GULF STATES PAPER CORP TUSCALOOSA
R I E G E L P A P E R C O R P NJ LU 712

Total:

1,200
1,100
1,600
1,200
2,200
1,350
1,100
1, T O O
1,300
1,600
1,200
1,100
1,500
1,500
1,500
1,000

25 a g r e e m e n t s . . . . . . . . , . . 38, 850

P r i n t i n g , p u b lis h in g , an d a l l i e d i n d u s t r i e s
1428
1422
1451
1411
1435
1446
1421
1414
1409
1453
1436
1455
1402

03
03
03
04
04
04
C4
06
C7
08
09
12
12

E D I T I O N B O O K B I N O E R S O F N Y I N C L U 25
P R I N T I N G I N D U S O F M E T R O N Y I N C L U 51
W A S H P O S T C O LU 35
CHICAGO LITHOGRAPHERS ASSN
I— A P R I N T I N G I N D U S T R Y O F T W I N C I T I E S L U 2 2 9
MILWAUKEE LITHOGRAPHERS ASSN MILWAUKEE
P R I N T I N G I N D U S OF M E T R O N Y I N C L U 2 3
F R A N K L I N A S S N O F C H I C A G O L U 16
MC C A L L C O R P MC C A L L P R I N T I N G C O LU 1 9 9
S I M P L I C I T Y P A T T E R N CO INC N I L E S P L ANT LU 158
I - A T W I N C I T Y C O M M E R C I A L P R I N T E R S L U 12
C H I C A G O N E W S P A P E R P U B L I S H E R S ASSN 5 COS 706
I - A B O S T O N D A I L Y N E W S P A P E R L U 13

T o t a l:

1,950
3,500
1,050
5,500
1,500
1,600
1,500
1,300
1,700
1,600
1,200
1,300
1,000

244
323
243
243
243

244

13 a g r e e m e n t s , , „ . . . 0 0 . 0 25, 200

C h e m i c a l s and a l l i e d p r o d u c t s
1643
169C
1616
1652
1668
1692
1672
1691
1608
1626
1630
1650
1649
1639
1657
1641
1642
1603
1637
1622
1602

01
Cl
01
01
01
C2
02
02
03
03
C3
C3
03
04
05
05
06
07
07
08
12

A M E R I C A N C Y A N A M I D C O L E D E R L E LA B S DIV LU 143
D U P O N T E I DE N E M O U R S ♦ CO T E X T I L E F I B E R S DEPT
PPG I N D U S T R I E S C H E M I C A L DIV LU 1
R E V L O N I N C O R P O R A T E D LU 65
S T E R L I N G O R U G I N C W I N T H R O P L A B O R A T O R I E S L U 61
DU PON T E I DE N E M O U R S + CO C L E R D E E P W A T E R
DU PONT E I DE N E M O U R S ♦ CO C L I N T O N
P P G I N D U S T R I E S INC C H E M I C A L D I V L U 45
A T L A N T I C R I C H F I E L D H A N F O R D CO
B E A U N I T C O R P F I B E R S DIV 2 P L T S LU 220 7
DOW C H E M I C A L CO M I D L A N D DIV LU 12075
LEVER BROTHERS CO HAMMOND 7-336
LEVER B R O T H E R S CO M A S T E R I N T E RSTATE
R O H M A N D H A A S C O B R I S T O L LU 88
H E R C U L E S INC R A D F O R D ARM Y A M M PLT LU 3 - 4 9 5
U N I O N C A R B I D E CORP C H E M I C A L S ♦ PLAS T I C DIV
UNION CARBIDE CORP CHEMICALS + PLASTICS
D I A M O N D S H A M R O C K C H E M I C A L CO P I N E S V I L L E WKS
M O N S A N T O C O S P R I N G F I E L D P L A N T L U 288
BASF W Y A N D O T T E CORP INDUS C H E M GROUP LU 7-627
AM C Y A N A M I D C O B O U N D B R O O K LU 111

T otal:

1,400
2,200
1,400
1,500
1,300
4,100
ltl50
1,000
1,050
2,800
5,100
1,200
3,100
1,200
2,750
1,200
1,800
1,050
1,150
1,000
1,600

21 a g r e e m e n t s . . . . . .

P e t r o l e u m r e f i n i n g and r e l a t e d i n d u s t r i e s
1808

04

HUMBLE

OIL

♦

REFINING

CO

♦

T o tal:

ENJAY

CHEM

1,200

CO

1 agreem ent. . . . . . . .

. . . 1,2 0 0

R u b b e r and m i s c e l l a n e o u s p l a s t i c s p r o d u c t s
1918
19C1
1924
1927
1925

04
04
04
04
11




OAYCO CORP SOUTHERN DIV
D A Y T O N T I R E *■ R U B B E R C O

WAYNESVILLE
LU 178

LU

277

FORMICA CORP CINCINNATI LU 757
O W E N S - I L L I N O I S INC B L O W N P L A S T I C C O N T A I N E R
F O S T E R G R A N T C O INC L U 60
T o t a l: 5 a g r e e m e n t s . .......... .. . . . . .

1,450
1,350
1,000
1,700
1,000

6,500

1
1
4
4
4

A G R EE ­

MENT

EXP.
DAT E

COMPANY AND L O C A T I O N 1

OF
WORKERS

NG.

CODES 2

NUMBER

SIC

STATE

U N IO N

U N IT

L e a t h e r and l e a t h e r p r o d u c t s
2130
2117
2120
2119
2121
2123
2103
21C 5
2104
2110
2109
2101
2124
2127
2116

Cl

03
04
04
04
05
06
07
07
09
09
09
10
12
12

F R O L I C F O O T W E A R INC J O N E S B O R O LU 728
F U L T O N C N T Y G L O V E M F R S INC ♦ B L O C K CUT MFRS
I— A L A D I E S H A N 0 B A G S ♦ L E A T H E R N O V E L T I E S N Y C
L U G G A G E ♦ L E A T H E R G 0 0 0 S M F R S A S S N INC N Y
NY INDUS C O U N C I L OF T HE N A T L H A N D B A G A SSN
AC M E BO O T C O M P A N Y INC
AUBURN SHOE MFRS ASSN AUBURN + LEWISTON
BROWN SHOE CO
BR O W N SHOE CO
I N T E R C O INC E V A N S V I L L E F A C T O R Y
I N T E R C O INC ST C L A I R F A C T O R Y
MASS LEATHER MFRS ASSN
Q U A L I T Y S H O E M F R S A S S N INC + O T H S
T A N N E R S A S S N O F F U L T O N C O U N T Y INC L U 1 7 1 2
W E Y E N B E R G SHOE M FG CO M I L W A U K E E LU 170

T o tal:

1,050
1,050
4,000
1,800
6,000
1,950
1,200
8,000
5,800
3,250
6,250
1,400
4,000
1,000
1,300

31
31

31
31
31
31
31
31
31
3\
31
31
31
31
31

71
21
21
21
21
62
11
00
00
33
43
14
21
21
35

188
500
141
141
141
333
705
188
334
188
334
356
334
305
188

1
2
3
2
2
4
2
4
4
1
1
2
2
2
4

22
21
43
00
93
00
72
00
00
90
00
64
22
31
00
31
55
31
31
31
00
22
00

231
218
135
135
135
135
135
135
135
135
135
135
135
135
137
137
137
137
137
137
314
137
335

4
1
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
1
2
4
1
1
2
1
4
1
4

63
62
22
55
32
92
34
14
23
00
00
91
31
00
31
00
63
63
00
22
87
87
31
86
22
23
31
16

161
121
553
357
335
600
553
335
335
220
335
220
484
335
335
335
220
600
553
335
335
335
218
335
335
500
500
553

1
1
4
1
1
2
1
4
1
4
4
1
1
4
1
4
1
1

15 a g r e e m e n t s , ............... . „ 48, 050

Stone , c la y, g l a s s , a nd c o n c r e t e p r o d u c t s
2335
2334
2358
2364
2359
2355
2357
2356
2363
2362
2361
2360
2319
2317
2313
2303
2307
2310
2342
2343
2301
2315
2365

01
02
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
C3
03
03
04
05
08
09
09
09
09
09
10
10
10

JOHNS MANVILLE PRODS CORP MANVILLE FINOERNE
G A R L O C K INC M E C H R U B B E R D IV L U 588 D I S T 6
ANCHOR HOCKING CORP P ♦ M DEPT
B R C C K W A Y G L A S S CO INC P ♦ M A T L A N T I C CIT Y
GLASS CONTAINERS CORP AMD-P ♦ M DEPTS WESTERN
GLASS CONTAINERS CORP AMD ♦ P ♦ M DEPTS
I N D I A N H E A D INC P ♦ M N E W O R L E A N S 6 L U S
K R A F T C O C O R P M E T R O G L A S S D PA N J + ILL 5 L U S
O W E N S - I L L I N O I S INC P + M D E P T
O W E N S - I L L I N O I S INC P * M D E P T S A N F R A N C I S C O
O W E N S - I L L I N O I S INC F O R M I N G D E P T M I A M I B E A C H
TH A T C H E R GLASS MFG CO FO R M I N G - P ♦ M DEPT
W H E A T O N I NDUSTRIES PROD AND MAINT LU 219
O W E N S - I L L I N O I S INC C O L U M B U S L U S 106 ♦ 2 4 5
G L A S S C O N T A I N E R M F R S I N S T I T U T E INC
A N C H O R H O C K I N G G L A S S C O L A N C A S T E R 11 L O C A L S
C O N T I N E N T A L C A N CO INC G L A S S W A R E DIV 4 LUS
F E D E R A L P A P E R B O A R D C O INC C O L U M B U S 6 LUS
ILLUMINATING ♦ ALLIED GLASSWARE MFRS ASSN
O W E N S - I L L I N O I S INC T O L E D O L I B B E Y P R O D U C T S
L I B B E Y - O W E N S - F O R D CO
O W E N S - I L L I N O I S INC C O N S U M E R T E C H P R O D DIV
US S T E E L C O R P US S U P P L Y DIV P ♦ M

T otal:

23 a g r e e m e n t s .................

2,000
1,200
4,900
4,900
4,550
3,950
2,250
1,500
11,650
2,450
2,200
2,850
2,500
1,150
2,500
2,500
2,800
1,600
1,000
1,100
8,400
1,500
1,000

32
32

32
32
32
32
32
32
32
32
32
32
32
32
32
32
32
32
32
32
32
32
32

70, 650

P r im a r y m etal in d ustries
2632
2588
2636
2548
2635
2549
2656
2654
2552
2591
2592
2629
2646
2604
2585
2610
2611
2645
2590
2589
2583
2582
2657
2586
2576
2505
2504
2599

01
02
02
02
03
03
04
04
05
05
05
05
C5
05
05
05
05
05
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
07
07
07




CENTRAL FOUNORY CO HOLT
CITIES SERVICE CO COPPERHILL OPERATIONS L 401
ENGELHARO MINERALS ♦ CHEMICALS CORP LU 1668
U N I O N C A R B I D E C O R P F E R R O A L L O Y S D IV LU 3 - 8 9
CABOT CORP STELLITE DIV KOKOMO
U N I T E D METAL TRADES ASS N SHOP WORK AGMT
HAYES— ALBION CORP ALBION MALLEABLE DIV L 474
W Y M A N G O R D O N CO INC W O R C E S T E R ♦ G R A F T O N P L T S
A L A N W O O D S T E E L CO LU 1392
A L U M C O OF AM O H I O PA IOWA ILL IND NY 9 L O C S
A L U M CO OF AM TEX NC A RK A L A PA IND ♦ TE N N
ALUMINUM CO OF AMERICA
D A Y T O N M A L L E A B L E IRON C O GHR F O U N D R Y DIV
K A I S E R A L U M I N U M ♦ C H E M I C A L C O R P 13 L U S 3
ORMET CORPORATION
R E Y N O L O S M E T A L S CO LU 4 8 1 3 s
R E Y N O L D S M E T A L S CO A L L O Y S P L A N T LU 2 0 0 3
REYNOLDS METALS CO LISTERHILL
A L U M CO OF AM O H I O + C A L I F
AM SM E L T I N G ♦ R E F I N I N G CO P E R T H PLT LU 365
K E N N E C O T T C O P P E R CORP U T A H C O P P E R DIV LU 4347
KENNECOTT COPPER CORP UTAH COPPER DIV LU 392
OHIO BRASS CO M A NSFIELO LU 2158
PHELPS DODGE CORP MORENCI-BISBEE-OOUGLAS
US META L S R E F I N I N G CO LU 837
ARMCO STEEL CORP BUTLER
ARMCO STEEL CORP MIODLETOWN
C H A S E B R A S S ♦ C O P P E R CO INC L 1565

1,050
1,500
1,100
1,000
1,300
1,800
1,100
1,400
2,300
9,000
11,000
1,700
1,000
7,400
1,750
8,500
2,100
1,000
2,000
1,100
1,150
1,550
1,000
2,300
1,550
3,500
6,000
1,050

33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33

33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33

4
1
1
1
1
4
1
1
4
1

AGREE­
MENT
NG.

COMPANY

EXP,
DATE

AND

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

LOCATION1

CODES2
SIC

STATE

UNION

UNIT

P r i m a r y m e t a l i n d u s t r i e s — C on ti n u e d
2540
2502
2506
2508
2510
2513
2512
2517
2518
2524
2501
2527
2526
2528
2622
2532
2554
2575
2523
2522
2655
2534
2614
2535
2626
2539
2544
2545
2613
2648
2551
2538
2553
2507
2514
2516
2550
2500
2525
2530
2555
2509
2520
2633
2649
2531
2619
264C
2650
2609

07
C8
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
C8
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10

SHARON STEEL C0RP PROD ♦ MAINTENANCE
A L L E G H E N Y L U D L U M I N D U S T R I E S INC N A T L AGMT
ARMCO STEEL CORP MASTER 7 LOCATIONS
BABCOCK ♦ WILCOX CO TUBULAR PROD U C T S DIV
BETHLEHEM STEEL CORP MASTER AGMT
CF + I ST E E L C O R P T R E N T O N + R O E B B I N G
CF ♦ I S TEEL C O R P C O L O ♦ C A L I F
C R U C I B L E INC P
M P A NY ♦ NJ 6 L U S
DETROIT STEEL CORP PRODUCTION ♦ MAINTENANCE
INLAND STEEL CO INDIANA HARBOR
I N T E R L A K E INC N E W P O R T W O R K S
J O N E S + L A U G H L I N S T E E L C O R P W A R R E N LU 1357
JONES ♦ LAUGHLIN STEEL CORP
KAISER STEEL CORP PROD MAINT STEEL MFG DIV
LATR O B E STEEL CO
LUKENS STEEL C O M P A N Y LUS 1165 ♦ 2295
L Y K E S - Y O U N G S T O W N CORP Y N G T W N S H E E T ♦ T U B E SUB
M I C R C O G T INC V A L L E Y M O U L D ♦ IRON CO DIV
NAIL STEEL C ORP GREAT LAKES STEEL DIV
N A T I O N A L STEEL CORP G R A N I T E C I T Y STEEL CO
NATL STEEL CORP MIDWEST S TEEL DIV LU 6103
NATL STEEL CORP WEI R T O N STEEL DIV
NL I N D U S T R I E S INC D O E H L E R - J A R V I S DIV 4 LUS
N O R T H W E S T E R N STEEL ♦ WIRE CO
PHOENIX STEEL CORP PROD ♦ MAIN EMPLS
REPUBLIC STEEL CORP PROD ♦ MAINT
US S T E E L C O R P P ♦ M E A S T ♦ W E S T O P E R S
US S T E E L C O R P P R O D U C I N G O P E R A T I O N S C L E R - T E C H
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O M P A N Y INC
WHEELING-PITTSBURGH STEEL CORP
WHEELING-PITTSBURGH STEEL CORP
WHEELING-PITTSBURGH STEEL CORP PROD + MAINT
Y O U N G S T O W N SHEET ♦ TUBE CO C L E R I C A L EES
A T L A N T I C STEEL CO
CONT STEEL C O R P K O K O M O LU 3601
C C P P E R W E L D S T E E L CO ST E E L BAR DIV LU 2243
CYCLOPS CORP S P E C I A L I T Y STEEL DIV
I N T E R L A K E INC R I V E R D A L E P L A N T LU 1053
INTL H A R V E S T E R CO W I S C O N S I N STEEL WKS C H I C A G O
LACLEDE STEEL CO ALTON WORKS
AM ST E E L F O U N D R I E S LUS 1063 1132 1206 + 2211
A R M O U R + CO B A L D W I N - L I M A - H A M I L T O N C O R P SUB
C Y C L O P S C O R P E M P I R E D E T R O I T STE E L LU 169
D A Y T O N M A L L E A B L E IRON CO LUS 2654 ♦ 3 664
INTALCO ALUMINUM CORP
LO N E STAR S TEEL CO LU 4 1 3 4
MCLOUTH STEEL CORP DETROIT
MESTA MACHINE CO WEST HOMESTEAD
OHIO FERRO-ALLOYS CORP 4 PLTS P + M
R E V E R E C O P P E R ♦ B R A S S INC R O M E DIV LU 56

To tal:

4,600
9,000
13,000
4,600
54,800
1,100
5,000
7,100

2 , ICC
17,000
1,000
1,050
21,000
6,500
1,450
3,400
17,150
1,500
9,500
3,300
1,300
10,100
3,850
3,700
1,200
35,000
105,000
7,100
5,400
1,000
10,000
6,800
1,450
1,100
1,550
1,950
1,850
2,500
3,450
2,000
3,000
1,950
1,250
2,100
1,000
3,000
3,600
1,600
1,150
1,350

33
33
33
33
33
33

33
33

33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33

33
33
33

33
33

33
33
33
33
33

33
33
33
33
33

33
33

33
33
33
33

Cj

oc
00
23
00
22
00
00
31
32
61
34

00
93
23
23
3C
30
34
30
32
00
00
33
51
00
OC
00
52

OC
00
00
30
58
32
31
23
33
33
33
00
23
31
31
91
74
34
23
00
21

335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
500
553
335
335
335
335
335
500
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
500
335
335
335
335
335
500
335
335
335
335
354

4
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
4
1
4
1
4
1
1
1
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
1
1
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
1
1
1
4
1
1
1
4
1
1
4
1
1
4
1
4
1

335
335
335
112
335
218
218
218
112
553
218
553
553
335
553
116
112
553
116
553
335
218

4
4
4
1
4
1
2
1
2
1
3
1
1
4
1
2
1
1
2
1
4
4

7 8 a g r e e m e n t s .............. . . 487, 650

F a b r i c a t e d m e t a l p r o d u c t s , e x c e p t o r d n a n c e , m a c h i n e r y , and t r a n s p o r t a t i o n ie q u ip m e n t
2900
2903
2969
2983
2905
2902
2926
2904
2966
2968
2931
2907
2964
2914
2960
2977
2927
2962
2932
2933
2919
2910

02
02
02
02
02
03
03
03
03
04
04
04
04
05
05
05
07
07
07
07
07
08

AM C A N C O 3
CCNT CAN CO MASTER A G M T 3
C R O W N C O R K ♦ SE A L C O INC
D I E B O L D INC C A N T O N LU 1 1 9 1
N ATL C A N COR P MD ILL O H I O NY ♦ CAL I F
AMERICAN CAN COMPANY
CALIF METAL TRADES ASSN
C O N T C A N C O INC
W A S H I N G T O N M E T A L T R A D E S INC LU 1 04
A MERACE ESNA CORP ELAS T I C STOP NUT D LU 726
I-A M E T A L T R A D E S INDEP COS C A L I F
K E Y S T O N E C O N S O L I D A T E D I N D U S T R I E S LU 4 4 9
S T A N A D Y N E INC C H I C A G O D I V L U 59
C O L E M A N CO INC W I C H I T A LU 1 5 3 9 3
M A S T E R L O C K CO M I L W A U K E E LU 4 6 9
S T E E L F AB A S S N OF SO C A L I F INC LU 509
C O M B U S T I O N E N G INC C H A T T A N O O G A L U 6 5 6
F I S H E R C O N T R O L S CO M A R S H A L L T O W N LU 893 U N I T
IRON L E A G U E OF P HILA 4 V I C I N I T Y LU 502
K E L S E Y - H A Y E S CO HEINTZ DIV LU 834
R O C K W E L L MFG CO S T E R L I N G FA U C E T CO LU 6 2 1 4
K E L S E Y - H A Y E S CO UTICA OIV LU 1509 LOO G E 157

S ee fo o tn o t e s a t en d of t a b l e .




1

15,000
15,000
1,250
1,350
3,000
3,200
3,500
2,700
1,200
1,000
2,000
1,500
1,000
2,200
1,000
2,000
3,050
1,250
1,500
1,000
1,000
1,100

34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34
34

00
00
00
31
00
00
93
00
91
22
93
33
33
47
35
93
62
42
23
23
55
21

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

LOCATION1

|

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES2
SIC

STATE

UNION

UNIT

F a b r i c a t e d m e t a l p r o d u c t s , e x c e p t o r d n a n c e , m a c h i n e r y , an d t r a n s p o r t a t i o n e q u i p m e n t —C on ti n u e d
2936
2957
2946
2945
2916

08
09
10
11
12

IS S T E E L C 0 R P AM B R I D G E D P ♦ M
K O H L E R C O M P A N Y KOHL E R LU 833
N A T L S T A N D A R D CO 5 LU
AM C H A I N + C A B L E C O INC P + H 7 LU S
MFRS IN0US RELS ASSN

T otal:

4,300
3,450
1,000
1,500
4,000

34
34
34
34
34

00
35
00
OC
00

335
553
335
335
161

4
1
4
4
2

35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35
35

33
34
34
00
42
31
33
91
93
34
33
34
74
43
42
31
62
33
31
34
35
31
00
21
23
35
35
74
34
43
23
23
35
34
31
31
22
21
74
74
43
31
20
52
33
CO
00
34
33

218
553
553
335
553
127
218
218
218
107
218
553
100
335
553
163
553
553
553
553
553
218
553
100
218
218
107
218
553
107
335
218
335
166
335
553
335
335
335
335
335
335
335
218
500
553
335
500
531

1
4
1
4
1
4
1
2
1
1
4
1
1
1
1
4
1
4
1
4
4
1
4
1
4
1
1
4
1
1
1
4
4
2
4
1
1
4
1
1
1
4
4
4
4
4
4
1
1

36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36

33
00
00
61
31
32
35
74
00
93
15
62
42
21

127
553
553
127
500
347
218
347
127
127
127
347
553
127

4
4
4
1
1
4
4
1
4
1
1
4
4
2

27 a g r e e m e n t s .................... . 80, 050

M achinery, except e le c tr ic a l
3233
3324
3270
3204
3373
3296
3306
3305
3378
3235
3366
3254
3374
3297
3228
3367
3368
3255
3354
32C6
3213
3281
3319
3344
3372
3314
3203
3231
3304
3369
3207
3243
3236
3272
3278
3229
3209
3268
3237
3360
3362
3370
3315
3302
3212
3275
3310
3299
3346

01
02

02
C3
03
€3
03
03
04
04
C4
04
04
04
04
05
05
05
05
05
05
06
C6
06
06
06
07
07
07
07
08
08
08
08
08
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
10
10
10
10
10
11
12

CATERPILLAR TRACTOR CO JOLIET
B U R R O U G H S C O R P O R A T I O N LU 1313
FEDERAL-MOGUL C0RP BOWER ROLLER BEARING DIV
CA R R I E R C O R P O R A T I O N ELLIOTT CO
FMC C O R P L I N K - B E L T S P E E D E R D C E D A R RAPI D S
H C C V E R CO NO C A N T O N ♦ C A N T O N LU 1985
O U T B O A R D M A R I N E CORP GALE P R O D U C T S DIV LU 1659
W A S H M E T A L T R A D E S INC LU 79
C A T E R P I L L A R T R A C T O R C O LU 284
CLARK EQUIP CO INDUS TRUCK D BATTLE C REEK 939
G A R D N E R D E N V E R C O P L A N T S 1 A N D 6 LU 8 2 2
L E A R S I E G L E R INC N A T L T W I S T D R I L L T O O L SUB
L U F K I N I N D U S INC L U S 5 8 7 1 9 9 9 + 4 2 9
PET INC H U S S M A N N R E F R I G CO DIV
WHITE MOTOR CORP WHITE FARM EQUIP CO SHOP
A D D R E S S O G R A P H - M U L T I G R A P H C O R P O F F ♦ C L E R L U 49
P A R I S M F G CO P A R I S LU 1541
S U N D S T R A N D C O R P R O C K F O R D ♦ B E L V I D E R E LU 592
TECUMSEH PRODUCTS CO FACTORY AGMT LU 750
TELEDYNE CONTINENTAL MOTORS
T E L E D Y N E W I S C O N S I N MOT O R LU 283
A D D R E S S O G R A P H - M U L T I G R A P H CO R P E U C L I D LU 1228
C A S E J I C O IND IOWA W I S ♦ ILL 5 LU S
CHIC PNEUMATIC TOOL CO UTICA
JCY MFG CO F R A N K L I N LU 1842
TECU M S E H PRODUCTS CO LAUSON ENGINE DIV L 1259
B R I G G S ♦ S T R A T T O N C O R P M I L W A U K E E LU 232
C A M E R O N I R O N W O R K S INC LU 2 1 5
S EALED POWER CORP MU S K E G O N LU 637
S P E R R Y R A N D CO R P J O P L I N PLA N T LU 200
C C O P E R - B E S S E M E R CO G ROVE CITY LU 1153
EA T O N C O R P INDUS T R U C K D P H I L A LU 1717
HARNISCHFEGER CORP MAIN ♦ WEST ALLIS PLANTS
M I C H I G A N P A T T E R N M F R S A S S N OF D E T R O I T ♦ VIC
T I M K E N CO LU 1123 ♦ 2173 ♦ 2730
CLA R K EQUIP CO LIMA DIV LU 106
DE L A V A L T U R B I N E INC T R E N T O N L U 3 3 5 5
D R E S S E R INDUS INC D R E S S E R C L A R K DIV
H UGHES TOOL CO OIL DIV H O USTON
M U R P H Y GW INDUS T R I E S P E T R O L E U M M I N I N G DIV
V E N D O CO K A N S A S C I T Y LU 4 8 0 3
W E A N U N I T E D INC W E A N IND
I N G E R S O L L - R A N D CO
K O P P E R S C O I N C M E T A L P R O D S D I V L 1 7 8 4 12
O U T B O A R D MAR I N E CORP J O H N S O N O U T B O A R D S DIV
TRW INC M A R L I N - R O C K W E L L DI V
W E A N U N I T E D INC U N I T E D E NG ♦ FDR Y CO
TE C U M S E H PRODS CO
S E E B U R G C O R P OF DEL S E E B U R G PRO D S D IV LU 743

T o tal:

4,500
2,300
1,600
1,400
1,000
3,000
1,750
1,300
1,100
1,450
1,200
1,100
1,500
1,500
1,500
1,050
1,100
1,150
2,000
2,650
1,400
1,100
5,050
1,450
1,200
1,500
6,300
2,200
1,000
1,050
1,250
1,300
2,000
1,350
8,150
1,100
1,100
1,300
1,950
1,150
1,050
2,000
2,000
1,350
3,000
1,800
2,050
3,000
1,100

35

49 a g r e e m e n t s ...................., 9 5 , 4 0 0

E l e c t r i c a l m a c h i n e r y , e q u ip m e n t, and s u p p l i e s
3666
3701
3703
3777
3726
3778
3614
3710
3713
3714
3722
3658
3637
3645

01
01
02
02
02
02
03
04
04
04
05
06
06
06




BU N K E R RAMO COR P 3 A M P H E N O L D I V I S I O N S 1031
CHAMPION SPARK PLUG CO
ELTRA CORP NATL AGMT
SQU A R E D CO L E X I N G T O N LU 2220
T A P P A N CO M A N S F I E L D
W H I R L P O O L C O R P O R A T I O N E V A N S V I L L E LU 808
CUTLER HAMMER INDUS SYSTEMS SPEC PRODS DIVS
COLLINS RADIO CO ELECTRONICS PLANT DALLAS
G O U L D INC
G T E L E N K U R T INC
L E V I T O N M F G CO INC LU 1274
M A G N A V O X CO OF TE N N G R E E N V I L L E LU 796
M A Y T A G C O M P A N Y N E W T O N «• H A M P T O N
M F R S OF I L L U M I N A T I O N P R O D U C T S INC NY LU 3

1,900
3,850
6,700
1,100
1,000
7,500
1,500
1,550
1,200
2,000
1,700
2,800
2,700
2,550

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

LOCATION1

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES2
UNION

UNIT

SIC

STATE

36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36
36

31
43
22
33
31
46
22
56
33
21
14
32
72
33
23
33
43
23
33
73
74
84
22
32
86
71
33
41
21

347
127
500
127
127
127
127
346
127
346
346
127
127
127
127
127
346
127
500
127
346
127
127
553
346
107
218
218
127

4
1
4
1
1
1
4
4
4
1
1
1
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
2

37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37

31
32
34
34
34
54
00
32
34
31
14
14
63
31
14
00
34
23
34
35
43
34
62
90
90
90
21
35
93
23
00
43
30
23
00
93
00
21
00
22
93
00
00
00

553
107
553
107
107
500
553
553
553
553
320
320
553
553
347
553
107
553
553
107
553
553
218
119
600
127
500
101
320
320
335
553
553
553
335
218
553
218
218
553
218
218
553
335

1
1
4
4
1
1
4
1
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
1
3
3
2
1
1
1
1
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
4
4

E l e c t r i c a l m a c h i n e r y , e q u ip m e n t, and s u p p l i e s —C o n tin u e d
3620
3749
3662
3685
3689
3682
3678
3676
3681
3679
3684
3680
3736
3687
3686
3768
3721
3688
3677
3683
3774
3773
3750
3670
3771
3739
3633
3779
3647

06
06
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
08
C8
08
C8
08
08
08
09
09
09
1C
10
12

R E L I A N C E E L E C T R I C C O 4 PLTS LU 737
ZENI T H RADIO C0RP S P R I N G F I E L D LU 453
RCA C0RP CAMDEN AREA MASTER AGMT
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC H A W T H O R N E W O R K S
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC C O L U M B U S P L A N T L U 2C2
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O M P A N Y LU 1 9 7 4
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC LU 1470
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC L U S 3 0 6 0 3 0 6 1 ♦ 3 0 6 2
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC M O N T G O M E R Y P L A N T 1942
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC B U F F A L O
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO M E R R I M A C K V A L L E Y WORKS
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC I N O P L S WOR K S LU 1504
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC S H R E V E P O R T LU 2188
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC L U 1 8 5 9
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC A L L E N T O W N LU 1522
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC M O N T G O M E R Y P L T L 1 9 4 2
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC M F G D K A N S A S C I T Y
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC R E A D I N G LU 1898
WESTERN ELECTRIC CO TELETYPE SKOKIE
WESTERN ELECTRIC CO OKLAHOMA CITY WORKS
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC D A L L A S P L A N T
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O M F G D D E N V E R LU 2 3 0 0
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC L U 1 4 7 0
CTS C O R P E L K H A R T LU 941
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C CO INC P H O E N I X P L A N T
W H I R L P O O L C O R P FT S M I T H D 1 V L O 3 7 0
FEDDERS CORP NORGE DIV LU 554
W H I T E C O N S O L I N D U S T R I E S INC F R A N K L I N M F G C O
N Y L A M P ♦ S H A D E M F R S A S S N INC LU 3

T otal:

1,150
3,400
1,500
3,350
7,200
5,400
10,600
5,250
1,950
1,950
6,550
6,250
2,400
15,400
3,100
2,650
4,250
1,650
2,900
5,350
1,100
1,900
1,350
1,500
1,500
2,000
1,400
1,000
2,500

43 a g r e e m e n t s . . . . . . . . . 144, 550

T r a n s p o rta tio n equipm ent
4046
4014
4C24
4025
4035
4172
4036
4005
4126
4158
4144
4165
4077
4045
4132
4051
4013
4047
4012
4148
4000
4003
4135
4112
4111
4153
4043
4040
4114
4102
4038
4171
4001
4057
4119
4065
4066
4052
4056
4063
4080
4081
4084
4120

01
01
01
01
01
Cl
02
03
03
03
03
03
03
03
04
04
04
05
05
05
06
06
06
C6
06
06
06
07
07
08
08
08
09
09
09
09
09
10
10
10
10
10
10
10




A M M O T O R S C O R P J E E P U N I T T O L E D O L U 12
D A N A C O R P S P I C E R A XLE DIV FT W A Y N E P LANT
KELSEY HAYES CO DETROIT AND ROMULUS PLANTS
KELSEY HAYES CO PLANTS 1 2 3
J A C K S O N LU 670
M O T O R W H E E L C O R P L A N S I N G LU 182
N E W P O R T NEWS S H I P B U I L D I N G ♦ DRY DOCK CO
NORTH AMERICAN ROCKWELL COMMERCIAL PRODS
BORG WARNER CORP WARNER GEAR DIV MUNCIE 287
D I A M O N D R E O T R U C K S INC L U 6 5 0
EX C E L L O C O R P L I M A L U 12 1 1
GENL OYNAMICS CORP ELEC BOAT DIV QUINCY
GENL DYNAMICS CORP ELEC BOAT DIV OUINCY
H A Y E S I N T E R N A T I O N A L C O R P LU 1155
W H I T E M O T O R C O R P W H I T E T R U C K D I V LU 32
A M B A C I N DUS INC AM B O S C H DIV LU 206 S P R N G F I L D
BENDIX CORP
CLA R K EQUIP M E N T LU 623
AVCO CORP AVCO LYCOMING DIV WILLIAMSPORT 787
C L A R K EQU I P CO B U C H A N A N LU 4 6 8
H A R L E Y - D A V I D S O N M O T O R C O INC LU 209
ACF I N D U S T R I E S INC C A R T E R C A R B U R E T O R DIV
AUT O S P E C I A L T I E S MFG CO LU 793
A V C O C O R P A E R O S T R U C T U R E S DIV N A S H V I L L E LU 735
I— A P A C I F I C C O A S T S H I P B U I L D I N G ♦ R E P A I R
I-A P A C I F I C C O A S T S H I P B U I L D I N G ♦ R E P A I R F I R M S
PACIFIC C OAST S H I P B U I L D E R S ASSN 6 LUS
TRICO PROOUCTS CORP BUFFALO
SMITH A 0 CORP LU 19806
TODD S H I PYARDS CORP LOS AN G E L E S DIV LU 9
D R A V O C O R P E N G W K S 0 H E A V Y M E T A L S P L T L U 61
N O R T H AM R O C K W E L L C O R P 5 P L A N T S 5 LUS
P A C I F I C CAR 4 F O U N D R Y C O 2 SUBS LU 710
A M M O T O R S C O R P N A T L E C O N A G M T ♦ S U P P S 7 4 ♦ 75
B O E I N G CO V ERTOL DIV P ♦ M LU 1069
GENL AM TRANSPORTATION CORP
MCDON N E L L DOUGLAS COR P LU 720
MCOONNELL DOUGLAS CORP OOUGLAS AIRCRAFT CO
BENDIX CORP ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS DIV LU 1529
B O E I N G C O M P A N Y L US 751 70 ♦ 2 0 6 1
CURTISS-WRIGHT CORP WOOD-RIDGE ♦ WALLINGTON
LOCKHEED AIRCRAFT CORP LOCKHEED CALIF CO DIV
L O C K H E E D AI R C R F T CORP L O C K H E E D GEOR G I A CO DIV
NORTH AM ROCKWELL CORP
P U L L M A N INC P U L L M A N - S T A N D A R D 4 LUS

3,000
1,800
2,700
1,400
2,150
2,500
6,000
2,900
1,200
1,000
5,200
1,000
2,800
3,100
1,050
10,200
1,800
1,500
2,000
2,000
2,000
1,550
2,500
1,800
15,000
2,000
2,300
4,800
2,700
1,200
2,200
1,000
9,600
7,000
3,000
4,500
14,800
1,950
20,500
2,150
17,050
7,500
10,600
5,150

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP,
DATE

COMPANY

AND

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

LOCATION1

CODES2
SIC

STATE

UNION

UNIT

37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37
37

31
64
93
00
93
93
93
16
16
00
33

335
600
500
500
218
218
553
218
218
500
127

1
1
1
4
1
1
4
1
4
4
4

T r a n s p o r t a t i o n e q u i p m e n t —C o nti nue d
4173
4105
4082
4067
4088
4089
4090
4137
4096
4055
3663

1C
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
12
12

YOUNGSTOWN STEEL DOOR CO
L I T T O N S Y S T E M S INC I N G A L L S N U C L E A R S H P B L D G D
LOCKHEED AIRCRAFT C0RP LOCKHEED CALIF CO DIV
MCDONNELL DOUGLAS C0RP
ROHR C0RP LU 755
R O H R I N D U S INC R I V E R S I D E LU 9 6 4
T E L E D Y N E I N D U S T R I E S INC L U 506
UNITED AIRCRAFT CORP PRATT ♦ WHITNEY AIRCRAFT
UNITED AIRCRAFT CORP PRATT + WHITNEY AIRCRAFT
B O E I N G CO
S T E W A R T - W A R N E R C ORP C H I C A G O LU 1031

T o t a l:

1,150
5,000
3,200
4,250
2,200
1,100
1,200
2,550
11,500
8,400
3,050

55 a g r e e m e n t s . . .......... . . 241, 750

P r o f e s s i o n a l , s c i e n t i f i c , a nd c o n t r o l l i n g i n s t r u m e n t s ; p h o t o g r a p h i c and o p t i c a l goods; w a t c h e s a nd c lo c k s
4428
4427
4426
4418
4407
4411
4424
4433
4410

01
03
04
06
07
09
11
11
12

B U L O V A W A T C H C O INC
XEROX CORP XEROGRAPHIC DIV
R O C H E S T E R LU 14A
FISCHER ♦ PORTER CO ♦ 2 SUBS
GAF COR P B I N G H A M T O N LU 306
LEEDS ♦ N O R T H R U P CO LU 1350
R O B E R T S H A W C O N T R O L S CO NEW S T A N T O N DIV
JOHNSON ♦ JOHNSON CHICAGO LU 1437
PHARMSEAL LABORATORIES
ROBERTSHAW CONTROLS CO GRAYSON D LONG BEACH

2,050
5,600
1,300
1,500
2,100
1,000
1,300
1,100
1,200

38
38

21
21
23
21
23
23
33
93
93

500
305
500
121
553
335
337
600
553

4
1
4
4
1
1
4
l
1

39

23

333

1

31
22
35
23
93
33
93
00

531
197
197
531
531
186
531
197

3
4
1
1
1
4
1
4

38
38
38
38
38
38

38

9 a g r e e m e n t s . . . . . . . . . . . 17, 150

T otal:

M iscellaneous m anufacturing in d u stries
4611

11

ARMSTRONG

CORK

CO

LANCASTER

T o tal:

FLO O R P L A N T 285
1 ag reem en t.. . . . . . . .

3,000

L o c a l an d s u b u r b a n t r a n s i t a nd i n t e r u r b a n p a s s e n g e r t r a n s p o r t a t i o n
5027
5022
5015
5040
5039
5042
5030
5033

02
02
03
04
05
06
07
10

I-A T A X I C A B C O M P A N I E S C L E V E
TRANSPORT OF N J 8 LUS
MILWAUKEE ♦ SUBURBAN TRANSPORT CORP
YELLOW CAB CO PITTSBURGH
YEL L O W CAB CO OF SAN FR A N C I S C O
Y E L L O W CAB CO + C H E C K E R TAXI CO CHI
YELLOW CAB CO OF CALIF LA
G R E Y H O U N O L I N E S INC N A T L C O U N C I L OF

T o t a l:

LU

998

LU

777

GREYHOUND

1,250
3,450
1,200
1,100
1,100
5,000
1,600
12,000

41
41
41
41
41
41
41
41

8 a g r e e m e n t s . . . . . . . . . . . 26, 700

M o t o r f r e i g h t t r a n s p o r t a t i o n a nd w a r e h o u s i n g
5206
5217
5277
5240
5249

02
03
04
06
10

EASTERN CEMENT HAULERS ASSN
I-A M O V I N G A N D S T O R A G E IND LU 8 1 4
I-A P R I V A T E C A R R I E R A G M T S E A T T L E LU
U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E INC
U N I T E D P A R C E L S E R V I C E 10 L U S

T o tal:

174

2,500
3,500
3,000
3,000
1,600

42
42
42
42
42

00
20
91
20
93

531
531
531
531
531

2
3
3
1
4

3,000
1,100
1,900
2,000
5,000
1,000
21,000
1,050
12,000
5,000

44
44
44
44
44
44
44
44
44
44

00
23
54
63
72
72
00
58
70
52

186
335
239
239
239
239
239
239
239
239

2
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

1,500
2,800
14,500
6,100
26,000

48
48
48
48
48

35
90
93
00
00

346
127
346
346
346

4
4
4
4
4

5 ag reem en ts. . . . ..

W ater transportation
5428
5413
5417
5419
5421
5420
5423
5431
5416
5426

07
08
09
09
09
09
09
09
09
10

G R E A T L A K E S A S S N OF M A R I N E O P E R A T O R S
US S T E E L C O R P U N L I C E N S E D P E R S O N N E L P I T T S
HAMPTON ROADS SHIPPING ASSN
M O B I L E S T E A M S H I P A S S N INC LU 1410 ♦ 1410 1
NEW ORLEANS STEAMSHIP ASSN 2 LUS
NEW ORLEANS STEAMSHIP ASSN LU 854
NY S H I P P I N G A S S N PORT OF NEW YORK
SOUTH ATLANTIC EMPLRS NEGOTIATING COMM
W EST G U L F M A R I T I M E A S S N INC 27 LUS
S T E A M S H I P T R A D E A S S N OF B A L T I M O R E INC 6 L U S

T o t a l:

10 a g r e e m e n t s ...............
C om m unication

5718
5770
5721
5719
5700

01
03
03
06
07




GENL TELEPHONE CO OF WISCONSIN
G E N L T E L E C O OF T HE N O R T H W E S T INC LU 89
GENL TELEPHONE CO OF CALIF
GENL TELE CO OF THE SOUTHWEST
AM T E L E P H O N E ♦ T E L E G R A P H L O N G L I N E S D E P T

AGREE­
MENT
NO*

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

LOCATION 1

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES2
----------1
---------SIC
STATE

UNION

UNIT

C o m m u n i c a t i o n —C o nti nue d
5702
5701
5703
5705
5704
5707
5711
5712
5783
5722
5724
5726
5728
5795
5733
5732
5731
5734
5739
5784
5737
5736
5744
5749
5747
5740
5738
5742
5746
5750
5753
5751
5759
5752
5763
5792
5764
5765
5772
5774
5773
5725
5730
5741
5748
5743
5745
5771
5791
5761

07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
C7
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
C7
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
07
08
08
08
08
08
08
08
10
10

B E L L T E L E C O O F PA
B E L L T E L E C O OF PA C O M P T R O L L E R S D E P T
B E L L T E L E C O OF PA
BELL TE L E P H O N E CO OF PENN LU 1944
B E L L T E L E P H O N E L A B O R A T O R I E S INC
C H E S A P E A K E ♦ POTO M A C TELE CO ALL DE^TS
C H E S A P E A K E ♦ P O T O M A C TELE CO OF MD
CIN + SURBURBAN BELL TELE CO ♦ 1 OTH
D I A M O N D S T A T E TELE CO
ILL B E L L T E L E CO
ILL B E L L T E L E C O ILL + IND C O M M + M A R D E P T S
ILL B E L L T E L E P H O N E C O C O M P T R O L L E R S D E P T ILL
I N D I A N A B E L L T E L E C O INC
MICH BELL TELEPHONE CO SWITCHING SYSTEMS DEPT
MICH BELL TELEPHONE CO TRAFFIC DEPT
MICH BELL TELEPHONE CO PLANT DEPT
MICH BELL TELEPHONE CO COMPTROLLERS OPERS
MOUNTAIN STATES TELE ♦ TELE CO TRAFF + PLANT
N J B E L L TEL C O VP + C O M P ♦ G E N L D E P T S LU 827
NEW ENG TELE ♦ TELE CO PLT + ENG DEPT 9 LUS
NEW ENGLAND TELE ♦ TELE CO ACCT UNIT LU 2307
N EW E N G L A N D T E L E CO
NEW YORK T E L E P H O N E CO COMM UP S T A T E
NEW YORK T E L E P H O N E CO ♦ 1 O T H
NEW YORK TELEP H O N E CO ACCT- EXEC- TR E A DEPTS
NJ BELL TELE CO PLT + ENG D E P T S LU 827
NJ BELL TEL E CO T R A F F I C DEPT
NORTHWESTERN BELL TELE CO
NY TEL E CO D O W N S T A T E
OHIO BELL TELE CO
PACIFIC NO R T H W E S T BELL TELE CO
P A CIFIC TEL AND TEL CO LU 1011
PACIFIC TELE ♦ TELE CO TRAFFIC
PACIFIC TELE ♦ TELE CO ♦ BELL OF NEV ALL DEPT
SO B E L L T E L E ♦ T E L E C O
SOUTH CENTRAL BELL TELE CO
S O U THERN NEW E N GLANO TE L E P H O N E CO
S O U T H W E S T E R N BELL TELE CO ALL DEPTS
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O INC I N S T A L L A T I O N D E P T
WI S C O N S I N T E L E P H O N E CO TRAF F I C DEPT
WISCONSIN TELEPHONE CO PLANT DEPT
ILL BELL T E L E P H O N E C O - C O M M D EPT ♦ OT H S
LINCOLN TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
NJ BELL TELE CO C O M M + M A R K E T I N G D E P T S
NY TELE CO T R A F F I C D O W N S T A T E
NY T ELE C O U P S T A T E NY
NY T E L E P H O N E CO A C C O U N T I N G
W E S T E R N E L E C T R I C C O M P A N Y INC
G E N L T E L E C O O F ILL S E R C O N S T ♦ S U P P L Y O E P T S
ROCHESTER TELEPHONE CORP

To tal:

2*650
2,000
12,000
8,800
1,400
34,400
2,850
4,250
1,350
9,000
1,950
1,700
6,550
2,300
7,450
9,200
1,300
20,050
1,700
17,500
2,100
12,500
1,800
36,050
1,150
13,200
5,750
20,750
8,050
20,050
8,950
2,350
11,200
46,500
53,750
40,800
10,300
57,050
28,300
2,900
3,200
2,250
1,400
3,500
16,750
5,550
3,950
14,500
1,800
1,500

48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48
48

23
23
23
23
00
50
52
00
51
30
30
33
32
34
34
34
34
CO
22
10
10
10
21
21
21
22
22
00
00
31
00
00
93
00
50
00
16
00
00
35
35
33
46
22
00
21
00
00
33
21

516
516
516
127
346
346
500
346
516
346
500
127
346
346
346
346
346
346
127
127
127
127
516
346
516
127
346
346
516
346
346
127
500
346
346
346
516
346
346
346
346
500
346
346
516
516
516
346
127
346

4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4

49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49
49

33
00
93
91
86
00
35
31
23
33
23
74
32
23
50
35
58
21
21
31
31
63

127
500
100
127
127
127
704
342
127
118
342
127
335
500
500
127
127
127
127
342
127
127

4
4
4
1
2
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4

55 a g r e e m e n t s .................... 637, 200

E l e c t r i c , g a s, and s a n i t a r y s e r v i c e s
6084
6056
6050
6029
6087
6079
6041
6007
6020
6074
6039
6016
6069
6025
6054
6080
6015
6066
6065
6023
6085
6000

01
03
03
03
03
03
03
04
04
04
04
05
05
05
05
05
06
06
06
06
07
08




NORTHERN ILLINOIS GAS COMPANY
CINN GAS AND ELEC CO AND SUBS
PACIFIC LIGHTING SERVICE CO AND CALIF GAS CO
P U G E T S O U N D P O W E R ♦ L I G H T C O B E L L E V U E LU 77
SALT RIVER PROJECT AGRICUL IMPROVEMT POWER
VIRGINIA ELECTRIC ♦ POWER CO
WISC ELECTRIC POWER CO
M I L W A U K E E LU 2
CLE V E ELEC ILLUM CO 3 DIVS LU 270
METRO E DISON CO 5 LUS
PEOPLES GAS LIGHT ♦ COKE CO
CHICAGO L 18007
W E S T P E N N P O W E R CO LU 102
H O U S T O N L I G H T I N G ♦ P O W E R CO L U 66
NO INDIANA PUBLIC SERVICE
PA P O W E R A ND L I G H T CO
W A S H I N G T O N GAS LIG H T C O W A S H MD VA
W I S C O N S I N POWER ♦ LIGHT CO LU 965
G E O R G I A POWER CO
LONG ISLAND LIGHT I N G CO LU 1381
LONG ISLAND L I G H T I N G CO LU 1049
O H I O E D I S O N CO LOCS 118 126 181 350 351 4 5 7
C O L U M B U S ♦ SO O H I O E L E C C O LU 1466
A L A B A M A POWER CO ALAB A M A 8 LUS

1,550
1,150
7,500
1,350
1,400
3,050
1,300
2,900
1,800
1,950
1,100
3,200
3,600
4,650
2,100
1,400
4,100
1,300
2,800
1,850
1,450
2,600

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

COMPANY

EXP.
DATE

AND

LOCATION1

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES 2

j

STATE

UNION

UNIT

49
49
49

34
00
61

342
500
500

4

50
50
50
50
50
50

93
21
93
33
91
84

531
127
327
531
531
531

2
2
2
2
2
2

53
53
53
53
53
53
53
53
53
53
53
53

21
22
21
33
34
50
43
21
41
33
41
41

332
184
332
531
531
500
531
531
531
531
531
531

4
4
4
4
1
4
1
1
1
4
1
4

54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54

14
14
40
30
35
00
41
10
91
41
41
34
10
34
91
91
59
21
00
84
23
40
41
00
33
93
93
23
21
23
31
31
20
31
74
74
31

155
155
155
500
155
155
184
184
184
155
155
184
155
184
155
531
184
184
184
155
155
155
184
184
108
184
184
155
155
531
155
184
155
155
184
184
184

4
4
3
4
3
3
2
4
2
3
3
1
4
2
2
2
4
4
3
3
3
3
3
4
1
3
3
1
4
2
2
2
4
2
4
4
4

55
55

93
43

218
531

3
3

SIC

E l e c t r i c , g a s, and s a n t i a r y s e r v i c e s - - C o n t i n u e d
6059
6045
6067

08
09
11

CONSUMERS POWER CO OPER-MAINT-CONST EMPLS
CONSOL GAS SUPPLY C0RP CLARKSBURG
LOUISVILLE GAS ♦ ELECTRIC CO LOUISVILLE

T o tal:

5,400
1,750
2,750

1
1

25 a g r e e m e n t s 0 . . . „ . ____ 64, 000
W holesale tra d e

6304
6308
6322
6325
6321
6319

01
03
03
04
05
09

A S S O C P R O D U C E D E A L E R S ♦ B R O K E R S O F L A I NC
1,500
E L E C T R I C A L W H O L E S A L E R S IND W H S E F I R M S LU 3
1,000
GROWER SHIPPER VEGETABLE ASSN CENTRAL CALIF
1,100
N O ILL R E A D Y M I X ♦ M A T E R I A L S A S S N 2 L U S
2,200
TR E E F R U I T S L A B O R R E L A T I O N S C O M M I T T E E INC 760
1,200
A S S O C G R O C E R S OF C O L O INC LU 4 5 2
1,200
T o tal: 6 a g r e e m e n t s . „ „ .. . . ,» o o o . 8, 200

R e t a i l t r a d e —g e n e r a l m e r c h a n d i s e
6508
6507
6500
6525
6539
6517
6522
6519
6530
6521
6534
6540

01
01
02
02
03
06
07
07
07
07
07
07

M A C Y R H ♦ C O INC M A C Y ' S N E W Y O R K L U 1-S
M A C Y R H ♦ C O I N C B A M B E R G E R S D I V L U 21
BLOOMINGDALE BROS NYC LU 3
S P I E G E L INC M A I L O R D E R D I V L O C A L 743
H U D S O N JL C O D E T R O I T LU 299
WOODWARD ♦ LOTHROP
M O N T G O M E R Y W A R O + C O INC C A T A L O G H O U S E LU 838
M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D ♦ C O INC A L B A N Y C A T A L O G H O U S E
M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D ♦ C O INC C A T A L O G H O U S E L U 149
M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D ♦ C O INC CHI C A T A L O G H S E 743
M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D ♦ C O R E T A I L S T O R E S LU 149
M O N T G O M E R Y W A R D CO INC M E T R O P D I S T D E P T S L 149

T otal:

9,000
2,000
4,500
4,500
1,200
5,000
1,000
1,200
1,800
2,500
1,800
3,000

12 a g r e e m e n t s . Q„» a „ 0 0 . # 37, 500

R e t a i l t r a d e —food s t o r e s
6816
6802
6732
6745
6766
6771
6759
6760
6715
6735
6738
6821
6761
6826
6716
6824
6789
6829
6783
6795
6790
6737
6827
6803
6818
6736
6744
6700
6751
6786
6703
6704
6725
6813
6780
6791
6748

01
01
01
01
02
02
02
02
03
03
03
03
03
03
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
05
05
05
05
06
06
07
08
08
08
08
09
09
11

F I R S T N A T L S T O R E S INC N A T I C K L 2
F IRST N ATL ST O R E S INC B O S T O N LU 592
I— A I N D E P M E A T M A R K E T S S T L O U I S L U 8 8
JEWEL C O S INC JEW E L FOO D ST O R E S DIV
I— A M I L W A U K E E A R E A R E T A I L M E A T I N D U S T R Y
I— A P H I L A F 0 0 0 S T O R E S
ST P A U L F O O D R E T A I L E R S A S S N OF GRT R ST PAUL
STOP + SHOP INC 8 LUS
A L L I E D E M P L O Y E R S INC K I N G S N O H O M I S H C O U N T I E S
I-A F O O D M A R K E T AG M T OF M N P L S L U 6 5 3 A
I-A M E A T M A R K E T AG M T OF M N P L S L U 653
K R O G E R CO D E T R O I T B R A N C H LU 876
S T O P + S H O P C O S INC 5 LUS
U N I T E D S U P E R M A R K E T A S S N LU 8 76
A L L I E D E M P L O Y E R S INC
ALLI E D E M P L O Y E R S WHO L E S A L E G R O C E R Y 8 LUS
F O O D F A I R S T O R E S INC ♦ F R E D E R I C H * S M K T S INC
H I L L S S U P E R M A R K E T S INC LU 1 5 0 0
I-A A R E A G R O C E R Y C O N T R A C T M I N N ♦ WISC LU 1116
I-A D E N V E R R E T A I L G R O C E R S L U 6 3 4
I-A I N D E P E N D E N T M A R K E T S P H I L A
I-A MEAT DEPT E M P L O Y E E S G R E A T E R K A N S A S CITY
I-A N O M I N N F O O D I N D U S T R Y A G M T LU 1 1 1 6
BIG A P P L E S U P E R M A R K E T S INC LU 1063
C O N S O L F O O D S C O R P K I T C H E N S OF SA R A LEE LU 2
I-A M A S T E R F O O D + L I Q U O R A G R E E M E N T L U 58 8
I-A M A S T E R F O O D L I Q U O R A GMT F R E S N O LU 1288
ACM E M A R K E T S INC F O R T Y - F O R T L 72
L O B L A W INC
UTICA LU 1
PHI L A F O O D S T O R E E M P L R S L A B O R C O U N C I L LU 169
CLEVE FOOD INDUSTRY COMMITTEE LU 427
C L E V E F O O D INOU S T R Y C O M M I T T E E LU 880
G R E A T A ♦ P T E A C O INC N J ♦ N Y 4 L U S
NORTHEASTERN OHIO FOOD INDUSTRY EMPLOYERS
K R O G E R CO H O U S T O N DIV LU 455
W E I N G A R T E N J INC LU 455
KROGER CO
L O C A L S 1 0 5 9 31 4 1 552
Total: 37 agreem ents............ .

6901
6904

07
10

I-A
I-A

1,800
2,400
2,400
8,000
1,500
3,900
1,400
7,800
3,800
4,500
1,000
2,500
1,600
10,000
2,000
1,000
2,200
2,200
1,200
1,200
1,000
1,150
1,300
1,800
1,000
3,500
2,000
1,500
2,000
1,800
4,000
5,000
15,000
1,200
1,800
3,600
1,850

Retail trade—automotive dealers and gasoline service stations




A U T O M O T I V E R E P A I R INDUS LU 1414
STANDARD AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE STATION AGMT
Total: 2 agreem ents.................

1,500
3 >500

AGREE­
MENT
NO.

EXP.
DATE

COMPANY

AND

LOCATION1

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

CODES 2
SIC

STATE

56

21

332

2

58
58
58
58
58
58
58
58
58
58
58
58
58

93
93
93
21
91
33
93
93
91
33
41
88
93

145
145
145
145
145
145
145
145
145
145
145
145
500

3
2
2
2
3
2
2
2
2
3
2
2
1

3,300

60

91

500

4

1,500
3,100

63
63

35
00

163
238

1
4

3,000
13,000

65
65

21
21

118
118

2
2

70
70
70
70

22
41
59
31

145
145
145
100

2
2
2
2

72
72
72

33
34
33

533
533
533

2
3
2

73
73
73
73
73
73
73

33
00
21
21
93
33
33

118
323
118
332
500
118
118

2
4
3
2
3
3
2

75
75
75
75

21
41
93
93

531
531
600
600

2
2
2
2

UNION

UNIT

R e t a i l t r a d e —a p p a r e l a nd a c c e s s o r y s t o r e s
6911

08

SHOE

RETAILERS

LEAGUE

INC

1,200

T o tal:

1, 2 0 0

1 agreem ent,

R e t a i l t r a d e —e a t in g a nd d r i n k i n g p l a c e s
7110
7112
7128
7100
7140
7104
7130
7105
7123
7125
7114
7116
7126

02
02
04
05
05
07
07
07
07
08
09
11
12

I-A H O T E L ♦ R E S T A U R A N T I N D U S T R Y L US 681 ♦ 686
LONG BEACH ♦ ORANGE COUNTY RESTAURANT ASSN
E A S T B A Y R E S T A U R A N T A S S N INC R I C H M O N D L 59 5
AFFILIATED RESTAURATEURS
I N C O R P O R A T I O N LU 302
I-A R EST ♦ BARS B E L L I N G H A M ♦ 3 C O U N T I E S
CHI U N I O N RE S T E M P L O Y E E S C O U N C I L
E A S T BA Y R E S T A U R A N T A S S N LU 8 23
EA S T B AY R E S T A U R A N T A S S N INC LU 3 1 - 5 2 - 2 2 8
R E S T A S S N O F T H E S T A T E OF W A S H INC 2 L U S
I-A R E S T A U R A N T S C H I C A G O 5 L O C A L S
O N - S A L E L I Q U O R D E A L E R S O F M I N N INC 3 L U S
RENO EMPLOYERS COUNCIL LAKE TAHOE RESORT
B O B S B I G B O Y INC I N T R A S T A T E C A L I F

T o tal:

5,500
5,000
1,850
2,000
1,000
2,000
4,000
8,000
2,800
5,000
3,950
1,200
2,500

. . 44, 800

13 a g r e e m e n t s ;
B an kin g

7412

11

SEATTLE-FIRST

NATL

BANK

SEATTLE

T o tal:

♦ VIC

1 agreem ent. . . . . . . . . .
Insurance c a r r i e r s

7403
7400

04
12

NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE
AM N A T •L I N S U R A N C E C O

INSURANCE

T o t a l:

CO

LU

500

2 ag reem en ts, , , „„„. , „„
Real estate

7414
7410

12
12

REALTY
REALTY

ADVISORY
ADVISORY

BD
BD

ON
ON

L A B O R R A L S INC L U
L A B R E L S INC C O M M

T o t a l:

32J
BLDG

2 ag reem en ts. . . ,

00. 000

0

,16, 000

H o te ls , r o o m i n g h o u s e s , c a m p s , a n d o t h e r lo dgin g pla c e s
7526
7514
7518
7503

04
04
09
12

ASS O C H O T E L S OF A T L A N T I C C ITY LUS 491 ♦ 508
M I N N E A P O L I S AREA H O T E L S ♦ M O T E L S 3 LUS
SO F L O R I D A H O T E L ♦
OTEL ASSN DADE COUNTY
C I N N H O T E L S A S S N INC

T o t a l:

1,200
4,000
10,000
1,300

4 a g r e e m e n t s . . . . . . . . . . , . 16, 500
P erso n al serv ices

7703
7718
7704

11
11
11

C H I C A G O C L E A N E R S ASSN LU 46
I-A I N D U S L A U N D R Y ♦ L I N E N S U P P L Y IN D U S LU 129
P R O F E S S I O N A L LAUN D R Y INST OF C H I C A G O L A N D
Total: 3 a g r e e m e n t s . ......... . . . 9

3, 0 0
1,600
4,500

,1 0 0

M iscellaneous business serv ices
7953
7905

01
03

7902
7900
7942
7976
7977

04
05
09
11
11

ASSOC GUARD ♦ PATROL AGENCIES CHICAGO
U N I T E D PR E S S INTL INC LU 222
I-A C L E A N I N G C O N T R S ON C O M M E R C I A L JO B S
D I R E C T M AIL M A S T E R C O N T R A C T A S S N INC DI S T 65
I-A S E C U R I T Y A G E N C I E S U P T O W N A G M T B A Y AREA
I-A W A L K - U P A P A R T M E N T B L O G S LU 1
VOLUNTARY HI-RISE LAB NEGOTIATING COMM
Total:

7 a g r e e m e n t s . . . .....

4,000
1,000
4,509
1,700
3,500
4,900
2,000
2!, 600

A utom obile re p a ir, a utom obile s e rv ic e s , and g a ra g e s
7944
7907
7971
7934

02
04
05
05




M E T R O P G A R A G E BD O F T R A D E INC 5 N Y C L U 2 7 2
M I N N E A P O L I S A U T O M O B I L E D E A L E R S ASSN LU 974
C O N T R A C OSTA AU T O M O T I V E ASSN LUS 1173 ♦ 315
E A S T B A Y M O T O R CAR D E A L E R S INC 4 LUS

T o t a l:

4 ag re em en ts.. . . . . . .

3,000
1,500
1,200
2,000

7, 700

AGREE­
MENT
NC.

COMPANY

exp.
DATE

AND

NUMBER
OF
WORKERS

LOCATION1

CODES2
UNION

UNIT

SIC

STATE

76

00

127

4

78
78
78
78
78
78
78
78

93
00
00
00
00
93
00
20

192
162
102
102
162
162
162
192

2
3
2
2
2
2
3
3

79

00

102

2

80
80
80
80
80
80
80
80

41
21
33
91
21
21
21
31

903
332
600
903
118
118
118
118

3
2
1
2
2
2
2
2

82

14

500

1

89

62

100

1

M iscellaneous re p a ir serv ices
7936

11

RCA

C0RP

RCA

SERVICE

CO

DIV

T otal:

3,250
1 a g r e e m e n t „ , „ , , , , , , „ . . 3, 250

INTER

M o tio n p i c t u r e s
7915
7969
7912
792C
7921
7946
7918
7923

01
04
C6
06
C7
07
07
09

A S S N OF M O T I O N P I C T U R E ♦ TV P R O D U C E R S BAS I C
I-A T E L E V I S I O N V I D E O T A P E AG M T S Y N D I C A T I O N
ASS N OF MO T I O N P I C T U R E S T H E A T R I C A L AGMT
ASSN OF MOTION PICTURES TELE MOT I O N PICT U R E S
ASSN MOTION PICTURE ♦ TV PRODUCERS FILM AGMT
ASSN MOTION PICTURE ♦ TV PRODCRS THEATRICAL
I-A B A S I C T H E A T R I C A L M O T I O N P I C T U R E A G M T
I-A F I L M P R O C E S S I N G LU 702

T o t a l:

8 a g r e e m e n t s .................... . . <78, 950

A m usem ent and re c re atio n services,
7924

06

LEAGUE

OF

NY

THEATRES

18,200
8,000
23,500
23,500
1,200
1,200
1,200
2,150

except m otion p ic tu re s

INC

17,000

T o t a l:

17, 000

1 agreem ent.

M edical and other health s e r v ic e s
7928
7930
7959
7949
7948
7979
7939
7952

05
06
C6
C6
07
11
11
11

I-A T W I N C I T Y H O S P I T A L S M I N N E A P O L I S - S T PAUL
L E A G U E OF V O L U N T A R Y H O S P I T A L S + H O M E S OF NY
R U S H P R E S B Y T E R I A N ST L U K E S M E D I C A L C E N T E R
SEATTLE AREA HOSPITAL COUNCIL
A S S N OF P R I V A T E H O S P I T A L S INC LU 144
M E T R O NY N U R S I N G H O M E A S S N INC L P N LU 144
M E T R O NY N U R S I N G H O M E A S S N INC LU 144
YOUNGSTOWN HOSPITAL ASSN

T otal:

3,000
26,000
1,000
2,200
3,900
1,250
6,500
1,100

8 a g r e e m e n t s , ..............., , , . 44, 950
E ducational s e r v ic e s

7932

C6

MASS

INSTITUTE

OF

TECHNOLOGY

T o t a l:

DRAPER

LAB

1,250

1 a g r e e m e n t , . , . . ». . . , , , ,

1, 250

M iscellanoeus s e rv ice s
7937

C4

ARO

1,200

INCORPORATED

T o tal:
AGREEMENTS,

1 agreem ent,

, . , o , , 1, 200

t o t a l ; .......... 818; WORKERS, t o t a l ............3, 572, 150

1 See a p p e n d i x A f o r a b b r e v i a t i o n s .
2 See a p p e n d i x B f o r d e f i n i t i o n s of c o d e s .
3 Settled early.
NOTE:
D ata b a s e d
governm ent a g re em en ts.




on a g r e e m e n t s

on f il e w ith t h e B u r e a u of L a b o r

Statistics,

e x c l u d in g r a i l r o a d s , a i r l i n e s , a n d

Number
Company and location A

of
workers

Codes 2
SIC

State

Union

Unit

January

Canton Textile Mills ..........................................
Dan River M ills ...................................................
Lily-Tulip Holmdel, N . J ...................................
Mead Corp Kingsport, T e n n ............................
Allied Printing ......................................................
Growth International In c ...................................
Braniff Airways FI. A t t ......................................
Delta Pilots.............................................................
Wholesale Produce Suppliers............................
Greater NY Wholesale Grocers ........................
Federal Dept. Stores D e tro it............................
Chain & Ind. Food Stores Milw .....................
Total: 12 situations................................... . .

1,000
10,000
1,400
1,100
1,800
1,000
1,100
1,500
1,600
1,400
3,000
4,000

22
22
26
26
27
35
45
45
50
50
53
54

58
54
22
62
51
31
00
00
21
21
30
35

337
202
244
335
243
553
104
104
531
531
305
184

1
1
1
1
2
1
4
4
3
2
4
3

119
500
134
600
2] 8
121
500
104
184
155
184
184
163

2
1
4
4
1
1
1
4
4
4
4
2
1

116
143
143
119
129
127

2
2
2
2
3

28,900
February

AGC Rhode Island ..........................................
Remington Arms C o n n ......................................
Barbizon Corp ....................................................
Otis Elevator Co .................................................
Eureka-Williams .................................................
du Pont Sayreville, N.J ......................................
Timex Corp. Conn ..........................................
National Airline FI. Att ...................................
E.J. Korvette Philadelphia ..............................
Food Fair Miami ...............................................
Grand Union Co. NYC ...................................
Specialty Bakery Owners N Y ..........................
NY Stock Exchange NYC
............................
Total: 13 situations................................. ___

1,600
1,000
1,000
1,900
2,150
1,300
1,100
1,100
1,000
1,000
1,800
2,000
2,100

17
19
23
35
36
38
38
45
53
54
54
54
62

15
16
00
20
33
22
16
00
23
59
21
21
21

19,050
March

AGC Houston—Galveston.................................
C. Fla. Ctrs. Orlando ........................................
New England Rd. Bldrs. C o n n ..........................
So. Bldrs. Assn. Ill .............................................
Rd. Bldrs. Wis.........................................................
NECA Baltimore ...............................................
AGC Albuquerque NM ...................................
NECA Richmond Va .........................................
Dairies Cleveland ...............................................
National Homes Ind ........................................
Boise Cascade Wash & O r e ...............................
Printing Ind. Bindery..........................................
Amer Potash & Chem. Corp...............................
du Pont V a .............................................................
du Pont Seaford, Del ........................................
du Pont Waynesville, V a ....................................




2,200
2,200
5,000
1,500
2,400
1,200
1,000
1,520
1,200
1,000
2,600
4,500
1,000
1,900
2,400
1,900

15
15
16
16
16
17
17
17
20
24
26
27
28
28
28
28

74
59
16
33
35
52
85
54
31
32
90
21
93
54
51
54

116
127
531
119
527
243
480
500
500
500

2
2
2
3
4
4
1
1
1
1
1

Company and location

Number
of
workers

Codes *
SIC

State

Union

Unit

March— Continued
Schlage Lock C o .....................
Santa Clara Machine Shops . .
McGraw Edison W i s ..............
Manhattan & Bronx Transit .
N.Y. City Transit Auth . . . .
Pri. owned Bus Lines N.Y . . .
Western Clerl ..........................
TWA P ilo ts ...............................
Western FI. A t t ........................
Commonwealth Ed ..............
S. Cal. G a s .................................
A&P Southern M ic h ..............
Auto Parts Distributors Assn
LA Barbershops C a l i f ............
Assoc. Clean Plants K.C., Mo
Minn. C lean ...............................
Total: 32 situations..................... ..

AGC Rhode Is la n d .....................
Master Bldrs. W. P a .....................
Gen'I. Bldg. Ctrs. P h ila ..............
AGC Lake Charles, La ..............
Va. Assn, of Ctrs. Norfolk
Gen'I. Ctrs. Nashville, Tenn . . .
Bldg. Ctrs. Peoria, III
..............
AGC St. Paul, Minn ...................
AGC St. Paul—Minneapolis
AGC St. Louis Mo ...................
BTEA, AGC, Ctrs. Cleveland . .
BTEA, AGC O h io ............ ...........
AGC Akron, Ohio .....................
AGC M inn......................................
AGC Cleveland.............................
AGC Jacksonville .....................
AGC Springfield, I I I ...................
AGC St. Paul—Minneapolis . . .
AGC St. Louis, Mo ...................
AGC O h io ......................................
AGC Ohio
.................................
Montana Ctrs ...............................
AGC E. Mo. Except St. Louis . .
AGC St. Paul, Minn ...................
Underground Ctrs. Los Angeles
Ohio Ctrs. Cleveland .................
Ohio Ctrs. Oh., Ky., W. V a -----8 Area Ctrs. N.C., III .................
Ohio Ctrs. Columbus ..............
BTEA Rochester, N.Y
............
AGC Springfield, I I I ...................




1,000

1,100
1,025
5.500
30,500
1,150
3.900
3,600
1,000

10,000
4.900
3.000
1.500
1,300

1.000
1,200
105,195

34
35
36
41
41
41
45
45
45
48
48
54
55
72
72
72

93
93
35

22
22
22
00
00
00
33
93
34
21
93
43
41

100
218
335
341
341
341
183
104
104
127
342
184
531
109
533
533

1

2
4

1

1
2
4
4
4
4

1
4

2
3
2

2

Company and location 1

Number
of
workers

Codes 2
SIC

State

Union

Unit

April— Continued
Am Dredging—Maine to S. M d ............................
Nat'l. Pipeline Ctrs
.............................................
Allied Constr. Del & Md ...................................
Employing Bricklayers Pa
...............................
PDCA Minneapolis .............................................
SMACCA Wilmar, Minn ...................................
SMC Columbus, Ohio ........................................
Asphalt Indianapolis ..........................................
Plumbing Heat Denver ......................................
Mason Ctrs. LA C a l i f ..........................................
Sheet Metal Ctrs. Portland Ore .......................
NECA N.E. Texas
.............................................
Adolph Coors .........................................................
Columbus Coated Fabrics .................................
Hoerner—Waldorf, Minn ......................................
St. Croix Maine
..................................................
du Pont Martinsville, Va
...................................
Melville Shoe
..................... ................................
National Lock Co ...............................................
D.C. Transit
.........................................................
Hawaiian Tele. Co ...............................................
Kroger Co. Ala., Ky., Tenn
............................
Master Laundry Agm't. M ich ............................
Total: 53 situations

.............................. . .

3,200
7,800
1,000
1,570
1,500
1,500
1,050
1,200
2,725
1,400
1,175
1,000
1,150
1,100
1,100
1,050
3,200
1,800
1,500
2,400
3,200
1,850
2,000

17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
20
22
26
26
28
31
34
41
48
54
72

00
00
50
23
41
41
31
32
84
93
92
74
84
31
41
11
54
12
92
53
95
60
34

129
170
119
115
164
187
187
531
170
115
187
127
531
337
231
231
500
500
100
197
127
184
533

3
2
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
4
2

119
119
119
119
119
143
119
119
143
531
143
143
143
170
119
119
129
531
129
143
164
170
127

2
2
3
2
2
3
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

157,835
May

Gen'I. Ctrs. Kingston, N.Y ....................................
BTEA Rochester NY
........................................
Bldg. Ctrs. Indianapolis
...................................
AGC SW Mich
....................................................
AGC Saginaw Valley, Mich
............................
Mason Ctrs. Cincinnati ......................................
Bldg. Ctrs. Omaha Neb ......................................
Allied Constr. Milwaukee .................................
AGC Oregon & SW Wash ...................................
AGC Portland Oregon ........................................
AGC Yakima, Wash
........................................
AGC Seattle, Wash
..........................................
Constr. Syracuse N.Y ........................................
Mech. Ctrs. N.E. Pa
..........................................
BTEA Syracuse N.Y
........................................
AGC Oregon & SW Wash
.................................
AGC NW Wash ....................................................
AGC W. & Cent. Wash ......................................
........................................
Ohio Ctrs. Cleveland
Master Plasterers-Boston ...................................
PDCA Washington, D.C ......................................
...................................
Mech. Ctrs. Atlanta, Ga
NECA New Orleans ...........................................




1,200
1,500
1,800
2,500
2,200
1,600
2,000
4,000
5,600
1,500
5,600
1,300
1,350
2,000
1,000
8,720
6,000
1,800
11,000
1,000
1,000
1,300
1,200

15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
16
16
16
16
17
17
17
17

21
21
32
34
34
31
46
35
90
92
91
91
21
23
21
19
91
91
31
14
53
58
. 72

Company and location 1

Number
of
workers

Codes 2
SIC

State

Union

Unit

May— Continued
........................................
AGC Oklahoma Ctty
Mech. Ctrs. Chicago .............................................
Concrete St. Louis .............................................
Steel Ctrs. Celveland.............................................
NECA C in cin n a ti..................................................
NECA Milwaukee
.............................................
...................................
Plumbing & AC Arizona
Plumbing Seattle ..................................................
Elec. Ctrs. San Jose...............................................
Foundation Mass ...............................................
NECA Indiana ......................................................
...............................................
NECA Las Vegas
Mech. Ctrs. Cincinnati
......................................
Bakery Employers Labor Council ...................
Associated Milk Dealers
....................................
Scott Paper Winslow, Me .................................
Max Factor Hollywood, Calif...............................
Philip Carey Mfg. C o .............................................
Northeastern Foundry In c ...................................
HM X Ind ustries.....................................................
So. Cal. Rapid T ra n s it...........................................
Building Materials Cleveland
..........................
A&P, Giant, Safeway Va ...................................
...................................
Colonial Stores Atlanta
A&P, Kroger, M ilg ram ...........................................
Chain & Ind. Food Stores Chicago...................
Motor Car Dealers Assn, of San Fran ..............
Manhattan Merchant T a ilo rs ...............................
Seattle Building Owners Seattle .....................
Total: 52 situations

............................

1,040
9,118
1,000
2,400
1,080
1,500
3,658
1,600
1,540
2,000
1,100
1,100
1,000
1,000
1,450
1,700
1,500
1,000
4,000
1,100
7,405
2,100
3,000
1,900
3,700
1,400
1,800
1,000
1,000

17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
20
20
26
28
29
33
38
41
50
54
54
54
54
55
56
65

73
33
43
31
31
35
86
91
93
14
32
88
31
91
33
11
93
31
00
23
93
31
54
58
43
00
93
21
91

116
170
168
116
127
127
170
170
127
143
127
127
170
531
531
231
480
231
161
500
358
531
100
184
184
184
100
305
118

2
2
3
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
3
1
1
3
3
4
3
3
2
2
2

335
335
119
119
119
119
119
143
119
143
129
143
143
119
116
116
164
187
116
127

4
4
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
3
2
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
3
2

. . 130,358
June

Kennecot Copper ..................................................
Phelps Dodge .........................................................
AGC Boston .........................................................
Independents Maine .............................................
AGC SE Mass ......................................................
No Cent. Constr. Emplrs. Watertown N.Y . . . .
AGC Tulsa, Okla
...............................................
AGC Houston ......................................................
AGC Shreveport La .............................................
Mason Ctrs. Detroit
...........................................
AGC San Diego
..................................................
NW Ctrs. Assn. Toledo ......................................
Rd Bldrs. Lansing Mich ......................................
AGC 41 No. Ca. Counties......................................
AGC C o n n .............................................................
New Eng. Steel Boston........................................
PDCA Houston Texas...........................................
SMACCA Kansas C ity ...........................................
Reinforced Steel D etro it......... ...........................
NECA Grand Rapids.............................................




4,300
2,400
10,000
1,000
1,600
3,200
1,200
5,200
1,300
5,500
3,500
1,290
1,200
12,000
1,300
1,500
1,500
1,200
1,000
1.200

10
10
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
16
16
17
17
17
17
17
17

01
01
14
11
14
21
73
74
72
34
93
31
34
93
16
14
74
43
34
34

Company and location 1

Number
of
workers

Codes 2
SIC

State

Union

Unit

June— Continued
PDCA Oregon & SW Wash .................................
NECA Phoenix......................................................
Gypsum Drywall Santa Clara ..........................
Mech Ctrs. New Orleans ......................................
AGC Seattle Wash..................................................
Silk & Rayon Mfrs. Assn ...................................
R a tn e r............ ..........................................................
Fraiser Paper Maine .............................................
St. Regis Pensacola .............................................
West Vaco S.C................... .....................................
01 incraft Monroe La ...........................................
FMC Corp. V a rio u s ...............................................
Hercules, Inc. Covington V a ...............................
U.S. Borax & Chem. Corp. C a............................
Wagner Casting ......................................................
Anaconda M ontana...............................................
General Cable Corp.................................................
Beloit C o r p .............................................................
Honeywell, Inc. P a ...............................................
United Pilots .........................................................
Greater R.l. Food Emplrs .................................
Interboro Restaurants...........................................
75 Indep. Cafeterias NYC .................................
Assn, of Teleph. Answ. Services N .Y .................
League of N.Y. T h e a te rs ......................................
LA County Hospitals.............................................
Assoc. Hosp. of the East B a y ...............................
N .Y. Municipal Hosp. Aides ............................
N.Y. Municipal Hosp.—LPN's ............................

1,200
1,600
5,880
1,450
3,200
1,700
1,700
1,100
1,025
1,150
1,000
7,000
1,100
7,400
1,050
2,650
1,600
1,000
1,100
6,000
1,900
1,500
1,800
1,800
3,000
8,000
2,500
15,000
3,000

17
17
17
17
17
22
23
26
26
26
26
28
28
28
33
33
33
35
38
45
54
58
58
73
78
80
80
80
80

90
86
93
72
91
22
93
11
59
57
72
01
54
93
33
81
00
35
23
00
15
21
21
21
21
93
93
21
21

164
127
164
170
116
337
305
231
231
231
231
337
231
480
107
100
127
218
347
104
155
145
145
332
102
118
118
193
500

2
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
4
1
4
1
4
4
1
1
4
4
3
3
2
2
2
2
2
2

127
187
185
208
108
208
231
243
218
335
112
127
341
341
500
531
184
145

2
2
3
1
4
4
4
2
1
4
2
1
1
1
1
2
4
4

Total: 49 situations................................... . . 149,795
July
NECA Atlanta Ga ...............................................
SMC Houston ......................................................
Roofing Bay Area C a lif........................................
Michigan Sugar C o ..................................................
WF Schrafft & Sons .............................................
Utah—Idaho Sugar..................................................
Continental Can V a rio u s......................................
Graphic Arts of Michigan ...................................
Bermite Corp. Calif .............................................
US Pipe & Foundry Ala ....................................
Steel Fabricators Assn ........................................
Western Electric Lisle III ......................................
Muncipal Railroad San Fran ............................
Eastern Airlines FI. A tt ......................................
Rochester Tele
....................................................
Food Store Labor Council .................................
Food Fair Tampa ...............................................
Horn & Hardart N Y C ...........................................
Total: 18 situations................................... . . .




1,600
1,200
1,000
1,000
1,200
2,150
2,200
1,200
1,000
1,150
3,000
1,000
1,750
4,200
1,100
2,200
1,000
1,700
29,650

17
17
17
20
20
20
26
27
28
33
34
36
41
45
48
54
54
58

58
74
93
34
14
00
00
34
93
63
93
33
93
00
21
23
59
21

Number

Codes2

Company and location 1
workers

SIC

State

Union

Unit

August
Iron Ore Mining Cos ........................................ .. .
Master Plumbers Boston ....................................
New Eng. Mech Ctrs. Boston ............................
NECA Cincinnati ..................................................
Plumb & Mech. H a w a ii........................................
NECA Jersey City, N.J
......................................
Detroit Area Bakeries ........................................
Standard Brands (C lin to n )...................................
Kell wood ................................................................
Levi Strauss ...........................................................
Georgia Kraft Georgia...........................................
Shenango Furnace ..................................................
Keystone Steel Inc ...............................................
Stanley Flagg & Co .............................................
Associated Spring Corp ......................................
Worthington Corp. N . J ........................................
Design & Mfg. Co. Ind
......................................
Greater New York Food E m pl............................
Baltimore Food Empl. Labor...............................
Gen'l Hosp. Cincinnati
......................................
Total: 20 situations

................................. . .

20,000
1,250
1,800
3,100
1,250
1,100
1,300
1,000
1,200
2,000
1,400
1,500
2,400
1,000
1,000
1,600
1,350
4,900
8,500
2,000

10
16
17
17
17
17
20
20
23
23
26
33
33
34
34
35
36
54
54
80

01
14
14
31
95
22
34
42
71
62
58
00
33
23
16
22
32
21
52
31

335
170
170
127
170
127
108
208
134
134
231
335
500
335
553
335
553
155
184
193

4
3
2
2
2
2
3
1
1
1
1
4
1
1
1
1
1
2
2
2

170
127
108
337
423
500
500
188
346
100
335
500
239
531
531
104
155
184
155
184
184
332
500

2
2
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
4
1
1
2
4
4
4
2
4
4
4
2
4
2

59,650

September
Mech Ctrs. Houston ............................ . ...........
NECA Ft. Lauderdale...........................................
Tootsie Rolls I n c ....................................................
Bradford Dyeing A s s n ...........................................
Metropolitan Cont. N . Y ......................................
du Pont Louisville, K y ...........................................
Occidental Petroleum Co ....................................
Williams Mfg. Co ..................................................
Western Electric Co. G a ......................................
Anaconda American...............................................
Amsted Industries ...............................................
NY City Tran. Supervisors....................................
Boston I L A .............................................................
Pan Am Clerical......................................................
Pan Am Serv. S upply.............................................
United FI. A t t .........................................................
Wash D.C. Food Empl ...................................... .
Grand Union Co. N.J
........................................
A&P Co. A lto o n a ..................................................
Thorofare Markets West P a ..........................
Cleveland Food Industry C o m m ........................
Waldbaum Inc. N.Y . ...........................................
N.Y. Muncipal Hosps. Interns...............................
Total: 23 situations........................................




5,200
1,050
1,000
3,000
1,400
1,000
1,200
1,060
1,050
3,350
1,000
1,500
1,500
8,100
1,150
5,600
3,000
3,000
3,600
1,400
7,500
3,100
3,000
62,760

17
17
20
22
26
28
28
31
33
33
35
41
44
45
45
45
54
54
54
54
54
54
80

74
59
33
10
21
61
21
31
58
00
32
22
14
00
00
00
53
20
00
00
31
21
21

Company and location 1

Number
of
workers

Codes 2
SIC

State

Union

Unit

October
PDCA St. Louis, M o .............................................
New York Bakeries (Local 5 0 ) ..........................
Philadelphia M ilk .................................................
Bakery Employers Labor Council (Chi.) . . . .
Keebler Biscuit......................................................
Spartan M ills ................................... ....................
Textile Dyeing & Printing Co ..........................
West—Point Pepperill
......................................
UV Industries M ic h .............................................
Revere Copper & Brass Ala ............................
Eaton Corp ................................... ....................
Commericial Shearing ......................................
Robbins & Myers Ohio ...................................
Acme Akron ......................................................
Chain & Ind. Food Stores ...............................
Walt Disney World
...........................................
Total: 16 situations..................... ............. . . .

2,200
2,100
7,000
1,000
3,500
4,700
7,000
1,200
1,800
1,050
1,300
1,000
1,150
3,000
4,000
5,000

17
20
20
20
20
22
22
22
33
33
34
34
36
54
54
79

43
21
23
33
00
57
20
58
34
63
62
00
31
31
33
59

164
108
531
531
108
202
337
337
600
335
202
335
553
184
155
100

2
2
2
2
4
4
3
4
4
1
1
4
1
3
3
1

357
121
334
553
197
155
118
824
332

1
1
1
4
1
4
2
2
3

531
129
119
218
155
108
337
134
337
134
243
243
357
500
100
100
357

2
2
2
1
1
1
4
1
4
1
2
2
1
1
4
4
4

47,000
November

Ciba—Geify McIntosh, Ala ............................
Monsanto Co., Monsanto, I I I ............................
Florsheim Shoe Co...............................................
Revere Copper & Brass Mass, Mich, I I I ..........
Seattle T ra n s it......................................................
Kroger Co. S.E. Indiana
.................................
Chicago Apt. House Agm't. I l l ........................
Distribution & Service Co ...............................
Johns Hopkins Hosp. Balto ............................
Total: 9 situations

1,350
1,400
1,100
1,200
1,250
2,600
8,500
3,500
4,100

28
28
31
33
41
54
65
78
80

63
33
33
00
91
00
33
00
52

25,000
December

Ctrs. Assn. W. Pa..................................................
Indiana H ig h w a y ..................................................
Ctrs. Assn. W. Pa ...............................................
Olin Corp. Ill ......................................................
Bryan Packing Co ...............................................
Standard Brands (Curtis Candy) .....................
Fieldcrest M i l l s .......................... .........................
Malden Mills .........................................................
Pacific—Columbia M ills ......................................
Ken rose Mfg. C o .................................................
Franklin Assoc, of Bindery .............................
Franklin Assoc, of B o okb in dery.....................
Standard Oil of C a lif ...........................................
Amer. Oil of Ind ................................................
Shell Oil Co. of I I I ...............................................
Shell Oil Co. of I I I ...............................................
Texaco, I n c ...........................................................




2,000
3,300
1,120
3,500
1,000
1,200
6,000
1,000
1,500
1,200
1,000
1,100
3,000
2,300
1,600
1,300
8,500

16
16
16
19
20
20
22
22
22
23
27
27
29
29
29
29
29

23
32
23
33
64
33
50
14
57
54
33
33
93
32
33
33
74

Company and location 1

Number
of
workers

Codes 2
SIC

State

Union

Unit

December— Continued
Sun Oil C o .............................................................
Socony Mobil Oil C o ...........................................
Amer. Oil Co ......................................................
British—Petroleum...............................................
Gulf Oil Corp.........................................................
Assoc. Shoe Ind ..................................................
Titanium Metal C o rp ...........................................
Amer. Smelting & R e fin in g ...............................
Hobart Mfg. Co. O h ..........................................
Class 1 Railroads ..................................................
Metro Trans. Auth. B a l t ...................................
Eastern Airlines P ilo ts ........................................
North West C le ric a l.............................................
NY Oil Heating Assn ...........................................
A&P Loblaw, Youngstown

_ _

...............................

3,400
1,000
3,500
4,900
1,200
1,335
1,000
2,000
1,000
525,000
1,600
4,000
2,300
2,800
1,300

Total: 32 situations................................. . . 597,255
------ -------------------- 1l________________
See a p p e n d ix A fo r a bbreviations.
See a p p e n d ix B fo r d e fin itio n s o f codes.




29
29
29
29
29
31
33
33
35
40
41
45
45
50
54

23
22
00
00
00
14
00
00
31
00
52
00
00
21
31

357
500
500
357
357
442
335
335
553
100
197
104
183
531
184

1
1
4
4
4
3
4
4
1
2
1
4
4
2
3

Table 10. Additional collective bargaining situations covering 1,000 workers or more with expiration in 1974,
by industry
Exp.
date

Company and location 1

Number
of
workers

Codes 2
SIC

State

Union

Unit

Metal mining
06
06
08

Kennecot C o pp er...........................................................................
Phelps D o d g e ..................................................................................
Iron Ore Mining Cos........................................................................
Total: 3 situations

........................................................... . . .

4,300
2,400
20,000

10
10
10

00
00
00

335
335
335

4
4
4

26,700
Building construction— general contractors

03
03
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06

AGC Houston—Galveston...........................................................
C.FIa. Ctrs. Orlando.......................................................................
AGC Rhode Is la n d .......................................................................
Master Bldrs. W. P a .......................................................................
Gen'l Bldg. Ctrs. P h ila ..................................................................
AGC Lake Charles, La ................................................................
Va. Assn, of Ctrs. Norfolk .........................................................
Gen'l Ctrs. Nashville Tenn ........................................................
Bldg Ctrs. Peoria I I I .......................................................................
AGC St. Paul M i n n .......................................................................
AGC St. Paul—Minneapolis.........................................................
AGC St. Louis, Mo.........................................................................
BTEA, AGC. Ctrs. Cleveland......................................................
BTEA, AGC O h io .........................................................................
AGC Akron O h io .........................................................................
AGC Minn .....................................................................................
AGC Cleveland..............................................................................
AGC Jacksonville...........................................................................
AGC Springfield I I I .......................................................................
Gen'l Ctrs. Kingston N Y .............................................................
BTEA Rochester N Y ....................................................................
Bldg. Ctrs. Indianapolis...............................................................
AGC SW M ic h ................................................................................
AGC Saginaw Valley M ich ...........................................................
Mason Ctrs. Cincinnati..................................................................
Bldg. Ctrs. Omaha Neb..................................................................
Allied Constr. M ilw a u k e e .......................... ................................
AGC Oregon & SW Wash................................................................
AGC Portland O regon..................................................................
AGC Yakima, Wash.......................................................................
AGC Seattle W ash.........................................................................
Constr. Syracuse NY ....................................................................
Mech. Ctrs. N.E. Pa .......................................................................
BTEA Syracuse NY ....................................................................
AGC B o s to n ..................................................................................
Independents Maine ....................................................................
AGC SE Mass..................................................................................
No. Cent. Constr. Emplos. Watertown N.Y ............................
AGC Tulsa O kla..............................................................................
AGC H o u sto n ................................................................................
AGC Shreveport L a .......................................................................
Mason Ctrs. D e tro it.......................................................................
AGC San D ie g o ..............................................................................
NW Ctrs. Assn. Toledo..................................................................




2,200
2,200
1,700
1,200
6,930
1,000
1,800
1,675
1,770
1,600
10,000
2,300
5,100
2,900
1,000
6,050
1,300
1,200
1,000
1,200
1,500
1,800
2,500
2,200
1,600
2,000
4,000
5,600
1,500
5,600
1,300
1,350
2,000
1,000
10,000
1,000
1,600
3,200
1,200
5,200
1,300
5,500
3,500
1,290

Total: 44 situations............................................................. . . . 121,865
i

15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15
15

74
59
15
23
23
72
54
62
33
41
41
43
31
31
31
41
31
59
33
21
21
32
34
34
31
46
35
90
92
91
91
21
23
21
14
11
14
21
73
74
72
34
93
31

116
143
143
129
119
119
119
143
143
115
119
129
119
143
143
119
129
143
143
119
119
119
119
119
143
119
119
143
531
143
143
143
170
119
119
119
119
119
119
143
119
143
129
143

2
2
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
2
2
3
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
3
2
2

Exp.
date

Company and location 1

Number
of
workers

Codes 2
SIC

State

Union

Unit

Construction other than building
construct*)n— general contractors
03
03
03
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
05
05
05
05
06
06
08
12
12
12

New Eng. Rd. Bldrs—C o nn ...........................................................
Bldrs. Assn. Ill..................................................................................
Rd Bldrs W is ...................................................................................
AGC St. Paul—M inneapolis.........................................................
AGC St. Louis Mo .......................................................................
AGC O h io .......................................................................................
AGC Ohio..................................................................................... .. .
Montana Ctrs...................................................................................
AGC E. Mo except St. L o u is ......................................................
AGC St. Paul—M inneapolis........................................................
Underground Ctrs. Los Angeles.................................................
Ohio Ctrs. C levelan d ....................................................................
Ohio Ctrs. Oh. Ky, W. Va ...........................................................
Ohio Ctrs. Colum bus....................................................................
8 Area Ctrs. N.C. I l l .......................................................................
BTEA Rochester N.Y ..................................................................
AGC Springfield, III ....................................................................
AGC Oregon & SW W ash.............................................................
AGC NW Wash................................................................................
AGC W & Cent W ash....................................................................
Ohio Ctrs Cleveland ....................................................................
Rd Bldrs Lansing Mich..................................................................
AGC 41 No. Ca. C ounties...........................................................
Master Plumbers Boston .............................................................
Ctrs Assn. W. Pa................................................................................
Indiana Highway ............................................................................
Ctrs Assn. W. Pa..............................................................................

5,000
1,500
2,400
7,000
1,500
3,000
2,000
1,850
2,050
17,000
1,000
11,000
1,500
10,000
3,400
1,000
1,500
8,720
6,000
1,800
11,000
1,200
12,000
1,250
2,000
3,300
1,120

16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16

16
33
35
41
43
31
31
81
43
41
93
31
00
31
33
21
33
90
91
91
31
34
93
14
23
32
23

143
119
129
129
119
143
129
129
129
119
143
129
100
143
143
143
129
119
129
531
129
143
119
170
531
129
119

2
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
2
3
2
2
2

Total: 27 situations ............................................................ . . . 121,130
Construction— special trade contractors
02
03
03
03
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
04
05
05
05
05

AGC Rhode Island.........................................................................
NEC A B altim ore...........................................................................
AGC Albuquerque N M ................................................................
NECA Richmond V a ....................................................................
Am Dreding—Maine to S. M d ......................................................
Nat'l Pipeline Ctrs............................................................................
Allied Constr. Del. & M d ................................................................
Employing Bricklayers P a ...........................................................
PDCA Minneapolis .......................................................................
SMACCA Wilmar M in n ................................................................
SMC Columbus Oh .......................................................................
Asphalt Indianapolis....................................................................
Plumbing & Heat D e n v e r.............................................................
Mason Ctrs. LA C a lif....................................................................
Sheet Metal Ctrs. Portland O r e ..................................................
NECA N.E. T e x a s .........................................................................
Master Plasterers—Boston..................................... .......................
PDCA Washington D.C..................................................................
Mech Ctrs. Atlanta Ga....................................................................
NECA New Orleans.......................................................................




1,600
1,200
1,000
1,520
3,200
7,800
1,000
1,570
1,500
1,500
1,050
1,200
2,725
1,400
1,175
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,300
1,200

17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17

15
52
85
54
00
00
50
23
41
41
31
32
84
93
92
74
14
53
58
72

119
127
116
127
129
170
119
115
164
187
187
531
170
115
187
127
143
164
170
127

2
2
2
2
3
2
2
3
2
2
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

Exp.
date

Company and location 1

Number
of
workers

Codes 2
SIC

State

Union

Unit

Construction— special contractors— Continued
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
05
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
06
07
07
07
08
08
08
08
09
09
10

AGC Oklahoma C i t y .....................................................................
Mech. Ctrs. Chicago.....................................................................
Concrete St. Louis .....................................................................
Steel Ctrs. Cleveland.....................................................................
NECA Cincinnati .......................................................................
NECA Milwaukee .......................................................................
Plumbing & AC A rizo n a ...............................................................
Plumbing S e a ttle ..........................................................................
Elec. Ctrs. San J o s e .....................................................................
Foundation M ass..........................................................................
NECA Indiana................................................................................
NECA Las V eg as..........................................................................
Mech Ctrs. C incinnati..................................................................
AGC Conn........................................................................................
New Eng. Steel—Boston...............................................................
PDCA Houston Texas.....................................................................
SMACCA Kansas City ...............................................................
Reinforced Steel D e tro it............................................................
NECA Grand R a p id s ..................................................................
PDCA Oregon & SW Wash ..........................................................
NECA P h o e n ix .............................................................................
Gypsum Drywall Santa C la ra....................................................
Mech. Ctrs. New Orleans ..........................................................
AGC Seattle Wash..........................................................................
NECA Atlanta G a ..........................................................................
SMC Houston ................................................................................
Roofing Bay Area Calif ............................................................
New Eng. Mech Ctrs.—Boston....................................................
NECA C in c in n a ti........................ .................................................
Plumb & Mech H a w a ii..................................................................
NECA Jersey City, N.J..................................................................
Mech Ctrs. H o u s to n .....................................................................
NECA Ft. Lauderdale..................................................................
P D C A St. Louis M o
............................................................................
Total:

54 situations

1,040
9,115
1,000
2,400
1,080
1,500
3,658
1,600
1,540
2,000
1,100
1,100
1,000
1,300
1,500
1,500
1,200
1,000
1,200
1,200
1,600
5,880
1,450
3,200
1,600
1,200
1,000
1,800
3,100
1,250
1,100
5,200
1,050
2,200

17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17
17

73
33
43
31
31
35
86
91
93
14
32
88
31
16
14
74
43
34
34
90
86
93
72
91
58
74
93
14
31
95
22
74
59
43

116
170
168
116
127
127
170
170
127
143
127
127
170
116
116
164
187
116
127
164
127
164
170
116
127
187
185
170
127
170
127
170
127
164

2
2
3
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2

.......................................................... . . 103,603
Ordnance and accessories

02
12

Remington Arms C o n n ......... .....................................................
Olin Corp. ill . ................................................................................
Total: 2 situations ..............................................................

1,000
3.500

19
19

16
33

500
218

1
1

4.500

Food and kindred products

03
04
05
05
07
07

Daries Cleveland .........................................................................
Adolph Coors..................................................................................
Bakery Employers L a b o r C oun cil
.................................................
Associated Milk Dealers (Chicago).............................................
Michigan Sugar C o .........................................................................
WF Schrafft & Sons .......................................................................




1,200
1,150
1,000
1,450
1,000
1,200

20
20
20
20
20
20

31
84
91
33
34
14

531
531
531
531
208
108

3
1
2
2
1
4

Exp.
date

Company and location 1

Number
of
workers

Codes 2
SIC

State

Union

Unit

Food and kindred products-—Continued
07
08
08
09
10
10
10
10
12
12

Utah—Idaho Sugar .......................................................................
Detroit Area Bakeries ..................................................................
Standard Brands (Clinton).............................................................
Tootsie Rolls I n c ...........................................................................
New York Bakeries (Local 50) ..................................................
Philadelphia Milk .........................................................................
Bakery Employers Labor Council ( C h i) ....................................
Keebler Biscuit.................................................................. ..
Bryan Packing Co .........................................................................
Standard Brands (Curtis Candy) ...............................................
Total: 16 situations

2,150
1,300
1,000
1,000
2,100
7,000
1,000
3,500
1,000
1,200

20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20

00
34
42
33
21
23
33
00
64
33

208
108
208
108
108
531
531
108
155
108

4
3
1
1
2
2
2
4
1
1

337
202
337
337
337
202
337
337
337
134
337

1
1
1
1
2
4
3
4
4
1
4

......................................................... . . . 28,250
Textile mill products

01
01
04
06
09
10
10
10
12
12
12

Canton Textile Mills ....................................................................
Dan River Mills ..............................................................................
Columbus Coated Fabrics ...........................................................
Silk & Rayon Mfrs. Assn .............................................................
Bradford Dyeing Assn ..................................................................
Spartan M ills.....................................................................................
Textile Dyeing & Printing C o ......................................................
West-Point Pepperill ....................................................................
Fieldcrest M ills ................................................................................
Malden Mills ...................................................................................
Pacific-Columbia Mills ..................................................................

1,000
10,000
1,100
1,700
3,000
4,700
7,000
1,200
6,000
1,000
1,500

22
22
22
22
22
22
22
22
22
22
22

58
54
31
22
10
57
20
58
50
14
57

Total: 11 situations ........................................................... . . . 38,200
Apparel and other finished products made
from fabrics and similar materials
02
06
08
08
12

Barbizon C o r p ................................................................................
R a th e r..............................................................................................
Kell w o o d ..........................................................................................
Levi Strauss.....................................................................................
Ken rose Mfg. C o ..............................................................................
Total: 5 s itu a tio n s ............................................................. ___

1,000
1,700
1,200
2,000
1,200

23
23
23
23
23

134
305
134
134
134

00
93
71
62
54

4
1
1
1
4

7,100
Lumber and wood products,
except furniture

03

National Homes In d .......................................................................
T n te l:

1 situ a tio n ..................................... .................. ___

1,000

24

119

4

244
335

1

32

1,000
Paper and allied products

01
01

Lily-Tulip Holmdel, N.J
........................................................
Mead Corp. Kingsport, Tenn ......................................................




1,400
1,100

26
26

22
62

1

indi
Exp.
date

Company and location

Number
of
workers

l

Codes
SIC

State

2

Union

Unit

Paper and allied products— Continued
03
04
04
05
06
06
06
06
07
08
09

2,600
1,100
1,050
1,700
1,100
1,025
1,150
1,000
2,200
1,400
1,400

Boise Cascade Wash &' Ore
Hoerner-Waldorf, Minn
St. Croix M a in e .................
Scott Paper Winslow, Me
Fraiser Paper Maine
St. Regis Pensacola
Westvaco S. C ...................
Olincraft Monroe, La
Continental Can Various
Georgia Kraft Georgia . .
Metropolitan Cont. N.Y .
Total: 13 situations

___

26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26
26

90
41
11
11
11
59
57
72
00
58
21

527
231
231
231
231
231
231
231
231
231
423

4
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
4
1
2

243
243
243
243
243

2
1
2
2
2

18,225
Printing, publishing, and
allied industries

01
03
07

12
12

1,800
4,500
1,200
1,000
1,100

Allied P rin tin g ............................
Printing Ind. B in d e ry .................
Graphic Arts of M ichigan.........
Franklin Assoc of Bindery . . .
Franklin Assoc of Bookbindery
Total: 5 situations

___

27
27
27
27
27

51
21
34
33
33

9,600

Chemicals and allied products
03
03

Amer. Potash & Chem. Corp . .
du Pont Va ...............................

03
03
04
05
06
06
06
07
09
09
11

du Pont Seaford, Del ............
du Pont Waynesville, V a.........
du Pont Martinsville, Va
Max Factor Hollywood, Calif.
FMC Corp. Various...................
Hercules, Inc. Covington, Va .
U.S. Borax & Chem. Corp. Ca
Bermite Corp. C a lif................
du Pont Louisville, Ky .........
Occidental Petroleum Co . . . .
Ciba-Geify McIntosh, Ala . . .
Monsanto Co., Monsanto, III .

11

Total: 14 situations

___

1,000

28

93

480

1

1,900
2,400
1,900
3,200
1,500
7,000
1,100
7,400
1,000
1,000
1,200
1,350
1,400

28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28

54
51
54
54
93
00
54
93
93
61
21
63
33

500
500
500
500
480
337
231
480
218
500
500
357
121

1
1
1
1
1
4
1
4
1
1
1
1
1

231
357
500
100

1
1
1
4

33,350
Petroleum refining and
related industries

05

12
12

12

Philip Carey Mfg. Co
Standard Oil of Calif
Amer. Oil of Ind . .
Shell Oil Co. of III .




1,000
3,000
2,300
1,600

29
29
29
29

31
93
32
33

Exp.
date

Number
of
workers

Company and location 1

Codes
SIC

State

2

Union

Unit

Petroleum refining and
related industries— Continued

12
12
12
12
12
12
12

Shell Oil Co. of III .........................................................................
Texaco,Inc .....................................................................................
Sun Oil C o .......................................................................................
Socony Mobil Oil C o ....................................................................
Ameri. Oil C o ...................................................................................
British-Petroleum .........................................................................
Gulf Oil C o rp ..................................................................................
Total: 11 situations

1,300
8,500
3,400
1,000
3,500
4,900
3,000

29
29
29
29
29
29
29

33
74
23
22
00
00
00

100
357
357
500
500
357
357

4
4
1
1
4
4
4

. . . 33,500
Leather and leather products

04
09
11
12

Melville Shoe.....................................................................................
Williams Mfg. C o ...........................................................................
Florsheim Shoe C o .........................................................................
Asso. Shoe Ind. Mass ..................................................................
Total: 4 s itu a tio n s............................................................. . . .

1,800
1,060
1,100
1,335

31
31
31
31

12
31
33
14

442

1
1
1
3

161
107
100
127
335
335
500
346
100
100
335
553
335
335

3
1
4
4
4
4
1
1
4
4
1
4
4
4

500
188
334

5,295
Primary metal industries

05
06
06
06
07
08
08
09
09
10
10
11
12
12

Northeastern Foundry Inc .........................................................
Wagner Casting................................................................................
Anaconda M on tan a.......................................................................
General Cable Corp .......................................................................
US Pipe & Foundry Ala .............................................................
Shenango Furnace .........................................................................
Keystone Steel Inc .......................................................................
Western Electric Co. G a ................................................................
Anaconda American ....................................................................
UV Industries Mich ....................................................................
Revere Copper & Brass Ala ........................................................
Revere Copper & Brass Mass, Mich, III ....................................
Titanium Metal C o rp ......................................................................
Amer. Smelting & Refining ........................................................
Total: 14 situations ........................................................... . . .

4,000
1,050
2,650
1,600
1,150
1,500
2,400
1,050
3,350
1,800
1,050
1,200
1,000
2,000

33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33
33

00
33
81
00
63
00
33
58
00
34
63
00
00
00

25,800
Fabricated metal products, except ordnance,
machinery, and transportation equipment

03
04
07
08
08
10
10

Schlage Lock C o ..........................................................................................
National Lock C o ...........................................................................
Steel Fabricators Assn....................................................................
Stanley Flagg & C o .........................................................................
Associated Spring C o rp ..................................................................
P n m m p rria l Shparina A S t a m o i n o ..................................................




1,000
1,500
3,000
1,000
1,000
1,300
1,000

Total: 7 situations................................................................ ___ 9,800
J________________

34
34
34
34
34
34
34

93
33
93
23
16
62
00

100
553
112
335
553
202
335

1
1
2
1
1
1
4

Exp.
date

Company and location 1

Number
of
workers

Codes2
SIC

State

Union

Unit

Machinery except electrical
01
02
03
06
08
09
12

Growth International I n c .............................................................
Otis Elevator C o ..............................................................................
Santa Clara Machine Shops .........................................................
Beloit Corp .....................................................................................
Worthington Corp. N.J ...............................................................
Amsted Industries .........................................................................
Hobart Mfg. Co ............................................................................
Total: 7 s itu a tio n s............................................................. ___

1,000
1,900
1,100
1,000
1,600
1,000
1,000

35
35
35
35
35
35
35

31
20
93
35
22
32
31

553
600
218
218
335
335
553

1

4
2
1
1
1
1

8,600
Electrical machinery, equipment,
and supplies

02
03
07
08
10

Eureka-Williams..............................................................................
McGraw Edison Wis .....................................................................
Western Electric I I I .......................................................................
Design & Mfg. Co. I n d ..................................................................
Robbins & Myers O hio ..................................................................
Total: 5 situations ............................................................. ___

2,150
1,025
1,000
1,350
1,150

36
36
36
36
36

33
35
33
32
31

218
335
127
553
553

1

4
1
1
1

6,675
Transportation equipment

06

Artie Enterprises............................................................................
Total: 1 s itu a tio n ................................................................ ___

1,200

37

41

343

1

1,200
Professional, scientific, and controlling
instruments; photographic and optical goods

02
02
05
06

du Pont Sayreville, N.J..................................................................
Timex Corp. Conn .......................................................................
HM X Industries..............................................................................
Honeywell, Inc. Pa .......................................................................
Total: 4 situations

........................................................... ___

1,300
1,100
1,100
1,100

38
38
38
38

22
16
23
23

121
500
500
347

1
1
1
1

100

2

4,600
Railroad transportation

12

Class I Railroads
Total: 1 s itu a tio n ................................................................ . .

525,000

40

00

595.000

Local and suburgan transit and interurban
passenger transportation
03
03
03
04

Manhattan & Bronx Transit .........................................................
N .Y. City Transit Auth ................................................................
Priv. owned Bus Lines N.Y .........................................................
D.C. Transit ...................................................................................




5,500
30,500
1,150
2,400

41
41
41
41

21
21
21
53

341
341
341
197

1
1
2

1

Exp.
date

Number
of
workers

Company and location 1

Codes2
SIC

State

Union

Unit

Local and suburban transit and interurban
passenger transportation— Continued

05
07
09

11
12

7,405
1,750
1,500
1,250
1,600

So. Cal. Rapid T r a n s it ..........
Municipal Railroad San Fran
N Y City Tran. Supervisors .
Seattle Transit..........................
Metro Trans. Auth. Balt . . .
Total: 9 situations . .

...

41
41
41
41
41

93
93
21
91
52

358
341
500
197
197

1
1
1
1
1

239

2

104
104
104
183
104
104
104
341
531
531
104
104
183

4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4

127
342
127
500

4
1
1
1

531
531
531
531

3
2
3
2

53,055
Water transportation

09

Boston I LA

...................

1,500

44

14

Total: 1 situation
Air transportation
01

01
02
03
03
03
06
07
09
09
09

12
12

Bran iff Airways FI. Att
Delta Pilots ...................
National Airline FI. A tt
Western C l e r l ................
TWA Pilots
................
West. FI. A tt ................
United P ilo ts ................
Eastern Airlines FI. A tt
Pan Am C le ric a l............
Pan Am Serv. Supply
United FI. Att
............
Eastern Airlines Pilots .
Northwest Clerical . . .
Total: 13 situations

1,100
1,500
1,100
3,900
3,600
1,000
6,000
4,200
8,100
1,150
5,600
4,000
2,300

45
45
45
45
45
45
45
45
45
45
45
45
45

00
00
00
00
00
00
00
00
00
00
00
00
00

43,550
Communication

03
03
04
07

Commonwealth Ed
S. Cal. G a s ............
Hawaiian Tele Co .
Rochester Tele . . .
Total: 4 situations

10,000
4,900
3,200
1,100

48
48
48
48

33
93
95
21

19,200
Wholesale trade

01
01
05

12

Wholesale Produce Suppliers .
Greater NY. Wholesale Grocers
Building Materials (Cleveland)
NY Oil Heating Assn ..............




Total: 4 situations

1,600
1,400
2,100
2,800
7,900

50
50
50
50

21
21
31
21

Company and location

ate

l

Number
of
workers

Codes 2
SIC

State

Union

Unit

Retail trade— general merchandise

01

02

3,000
1,000

Federal Dept. Stores Detroit
E.J. Korvette Philadelphia . .
Total: 2 situations

____

.

53
53

30
23

305
184

4
4

4,000

Retail trade— food stores
01

02
02

02
03
04
05
05
05
05
06
07
07
08
08
09
09
09
09
09
09

10
10
11

12

4,000
1,000
1,800
2,000
3,000
1,850
3,000
1,900
1,000
1,400
1,900
2,200
1,000
4,900
8,500
3,000
3,000
3,600
1,400
7,500
3,100
3,000
4,000
2,600
1,300

Chain & ln d . Food Stores Milwaukee
Food Fair M ia m i.................................
Grand Union Co N Y C ........................
Specialty Bakery Owners N Y ..........
A&P Southern Mich ..........................
Kroger Co. Ala, Ky, Tenn
..............
A&P, Giant, Safeway Va
..............
Colonial Stores A tla n ta .....................
A&P, Kroger, Milgram ........................
Chain & Ind. Food Stores Chicago . .
Greater R.l. Food Emplrs ...............
Food Store Labor Council ..............
Food Fair Tampa ...............................
Greater New York Food Empl . . . .
Baltimore Food Empl. L a b o r............
Wash. C.C. Food E m p l........................
Grand Union Co. N.J ..................... ..
A&P Tea Co. Altoona ........................
Thorofare Markets West P a ..............
Cleveland Food Industry Comm . . .
Waldbaum Inc. N .Y ...............................
Acme A k r o n ........................................
Chain Ind. Food S to re s .....................
Kroger Co. S.E. Indiana ...................
A&P Lablaw Youngstown .................
Total: 25 situations

............

___

54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54
54

35
59
21
21
34
60
54
58
43
00
15
23
59
21
52
53
20
00
00
31
21
31
33
00
31

184
155
184
184
184
184
100
184
184
184
155
531
184
155
184
155
184
155
184
184
332
184
155
155
184

3
4
4
2
4
4
3
4
3
3
4
2
4
2
2
2
4
4
4
2
4
3
3
4
3

71,950

Retail trade— Automotive dealers and
gasoline service stations
03
05

1,500
1,800

Auto Parts Distributors Assn............
Motor Car Dealers Assn, of San Fran
Total: 2 situations

..............

.........

55
55

21
93

53
100

2
2

3,300

Retail trade— apparel and
accessory stores
05

Manhattan Merchant Tailors




Total: 1 situation

1,000

1,000

56

21

305

2

Number

Exp.
date

Company and location

Codes

2

.X
OT

1

SIC

workers

State

Union

Unit

Retail trade— eating and
drinking places
06
06
07

Total: 3 s itu a tio n s .............................................................

58
58
58

1,500
1,800
1,700

Interboro Restaurants ................................................................
75 Indep. Cafeterias—N Y C .........................................................
Horn & Hardart, NYC ................................................................
. . .

21
21
21

145
145
145

3
3
4

5,000
Security and commodity brokers, dealers,
exchanges, and services

02

Total: 1 situation

.............................................................

62

2,100

N.Y. Stock Exchange N Y C ......................................................
. . .

21

163

1

118
118

2
2

109
533
533
533

3
2
2
2

2,100
Real estate

05
11

1,000
8,500

Seattle Building Owners, Seattle Wash . . ...............................
Chicago Apt. House Agmt. I l l .......................... .... .......................
Total: 2 s itu a tio n s .............................................................

. . .

65
65

91
33

9,500

Personal services
03
03
03
04

LA Barber Shops C a lif................................................................
Assoc. Clean Plants K.C., M o ....................................................
Minn. Clean.....................................................................................
Master Laundry Agm't. Mich ...............................................................................................
Total: 4 situations

1,300
1,000
1,200
2,000

...........................................................

72
72
72
72

93
43
41
34

5,500
Miscellaneous business services

06

Assn, of Teleph. Answ. Services...............................................

1,800

Total: 1 s itu a tio n ................................................................ ___

73

21

332

2

102
824

2
2

1,800
Motion pictures

06
11

Leagues of N.Y. Theaters .........................................................
Distribution & Service C o ...........................................................

3,000
3,500

Total: 2 s itu a tio n s .......................... ................................... . . .

78
78

21
00

6,500

Amusement and recreation services,
except motion pictures
10

Walt Disney W o r ld .......................................................................




Total: 1 situation

5,000

............................................................. ___

5,000

I__________

79

59

100

1

Exp.
date

Number
of
workers

Company and location 1

Codes 2
SIC

State

Union

Unit

Medical and other health services
06
06
06
06
08
09
11

8,000
2,500
15,000
3,000
2,000
3,000
4,100

LA County Hospitals..................................................................
Assoc. Hosp. of the East Bay A r e a ..........................................
NY Municipal Hosps. A id e s ......................................................
N .Y. Municipal Hosps. L P N S ....................................................
Gen'I. Hosp. Cincinnati................................................................
N.Y. Municipal Hosps. In te rn s ..................................................
Johns Hopkins Hosp. Balto........................................................

Total: 7 situations ............................................................. . . . 37,600
1,412,448

I
See a p p e n d ix A fo r abbreviations.
See a p p e n d ix B fo r d e fin itio n s o f codes.




80
80
80
80
80
80
80

93
93
21
21
31
21
52

118
118
193
500
193
500
332

2
2
2
2
2
2
3

Approximate
number of
workers
covered

Month of
reopenings

SIC
code 1

January.............

33

International Nickel Co., Inc. (Huntington,
W. Va.)

Steelworkers

F eb ru a ry ..........

38

Honeywell, Inc. (Minnesota)

Teamsters (Ind.)

March.................

49

Commonwealth Edison Co., Clerical
(Chicago, III.)

Electrical Workers
(IBEW)

1,400

58

Restaurant Hotel Employers, Council of
Southern California (California)

Hotel and Restaurant

9,000

16

Associated General Contractors of Minnesota
(Minnesota and North Dakota)

Laborers

9,000

16

Associated General Contractors of Minnesota
(Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minn.)

Teamsters (Ind.)

2,800

54

Food Employers Council, Inc., and Indepen­
dent Retail Operators (San Diego County,
Calif.)

Retail Clerks

16

Ohio Contractors Association (Kentucky
and Ohio)

Bricklayers; and
Plasterers

1,500

16

Ohio Contractors Association (Ohio)

Teamsters (Ind.)

2,000

35

USM Corporation, USM Machinery
Division (Beverly, Maine)

Electrical Workers
(UE) (Ind.)

1,000

15

Allied Construction Employers Association,
Inc. (Milwaukee, Wise.)

Carpenters

4,500

15

Building Trades Employers' Association
(Cleveland, Ohio)

Laborers

2,500

20

Campbell Soup Co. (Sacramento, Calif.)

Teamsters (Ind.)

1,400

16

Ohio Contractors Association (Ohio and
Kentucky) 2 agreements

Laborers
Operating Engineers

49

Pennsylvania Electric Co. (Pennsylvania)

Electrical Workers
(IBEW)

2,000

35

Rexnord, Inc., Norberg Division
(Milwaukee, Wis.)

Steelworkers

1,050

49

Arkansas Power and Light Co. (Arkansas)

Electrical Workers
(IBEW)

2,200

49

Kansas City Power and Light Co.
(Missouri and Kansas)

Electrical Workers
(IBEW)

1,050

28

Union Carbide Corp., Y-12 Plant
(Tennessee)

Atomic Trades and
Labor Council

3,550

A p r i l .................

M a y ...................

June...................




Company and location

Union 2

1,650

13,000

54,000

19,350
10,000

Month of
reopenings

SIC
code 1

J u ly ...................

48

Company and location

General Telephone of Ohio (Ohio)

Union

2

Communications

Approximate
number of
workers
covered
2,800

Workers
49

Illinois Power Co. (Illinois)

Electrical Workers
(IBEW)

1,100

49

Potomac Electric Power Co. (District
of Columbia)

Electric Utility
Employees
Union of
Washington, D.C.
(Ind.)

2,900

O cto ber............

28

Union Carbide Corp., Nuclear Division
(Tennessee)

Oil, Chemical, and
Atomic Workers

1,050

December . . . .

36

National Electric Corp., Eureka Williams
Co. (Bloomington, III.)

Machinists

2,000

See a p p e n d ix B fo r d e fin itio n o f codes.
U n io n a ffilia te d w ith A F L - C IO , e x c e p t w h ere n o ted as in d e p e n d e n t (In d .)




Approximate
number of
workers
covered

Month of
expiration

SIC
2
code

January..............

35

Park-Ohio Industries, Inc. (Cleveland, Ohio)

Auto Workers (Ind.)

1,150

F eb ru a ry ..........

16

Associated General Contractors of Mass­
achusetts, Inc., and the Building Trades Em­
ployers Association of Boston and Eastern
Massachusetts, Inc. (Massachusetts)

Operating Engineers

4,500

March ..............

16

Foundation and Marine Contractors
Association of New England, Inc.
(New England Region)

Operating Engineers

4,000

A p r i l .................

15

Associated General Contractors of
America, Inc., Northeastern Florida
Chapter (Florida)

Operating Engineers

1,250

17

Contracting Plasterers' Association of
Southern California, Inc. (California)

Plasterers, and
Cement Masons

2,600

17

Delaware Contractors Association, Inc.
(Delaware)

Laborers

1,200

16

Delaware Contractors Association
(Interstate)

Operating Engineers

5,200

36

l-T-E Imperial Corp. (Philadelphia, Pa.)

Auto Workers (Ind.)

2,700

17

Mechanical Contractors Association of
Eastern Pennsylvania, Inc.
(Pennsylvania)

Plumbers and Pipe
Fitters

2,400

17

Mechanical Contractors Association of
Eastern Pennsylvania, Inc.
(Pennsylvania)

Plumbers and Pipe
Fitters

1,600

17

National Electrical Contractors Association,
Greater Cleveland Chapter (Ohio)

Electrical Workers
(IBEW)

1,600

17

National Electrical Contractors Association,
St. Paul Chapter (Minnesota)

Electrical Workers
(IBEW)

1,400

16

South Central Employers Field Construction
(Interstate)

Boilermakers

3,200

15

Associated General Contractors of America,
Inc., Building Chapter, Cincinnati Division
(Ohio)

Laborers

1,200

16

Associated General Contractors of America,
Inc., 3 Chapters (Washington)

Teamsters (Ind.)

1,600

15

Construction Employers Labor Relations
Association of New York State, Inc.
(Rochester, N.Y.)

Laborers

1,500

M a y ...................




Company and location

Union 3

|

Month of
expiration

SIC
code 2

Union 3

Company and location

Approximate
number of
workers
covered

May—
Continued

June...................

J u ly .................




15

Construction Employers of the Hudson
Valley, Inc. (New York)

Carpenters

1,200

15

Construction League of Indianapolis, Inc.
(Indiana)

Carpenters

2,500

17

Eastern New York Construction Employers,
Inc. (New York)

Bricklayers

1,000

15

Eastern New York Construction Employers,
Inc. (New York)

Laborers

1,500

15

Eastern New York Construction Employers,
Inc. (Interstate)

Iron Workers

1,000

15

Eastern New York Construction Employers,
Inc. (New York)

Carpenters

3,250

54

Independent Super Markets, Grocery Division
(Missouri)

Retail Clerks

6,500

54

Kroger Co. (Cincinnati, Ohio)

Retail Clerks

2,200

26

Longview Fibre Co. (Longview, Wash.)

Western Pulp and
Paper Workers
(Ind.)

1,500

17

Plumbing and Mechanical Contractors of
Washington (Washington)

Plumbers and Pipe
Fitters

1,800

33

Reynolds Metals Co., Inc. (Interstate)

Aluminum Workers

1,700

15

Associated General Contractors of
Massachusetts, Inc., and 4 other
associations (New England Region)

Carpenters

6,500

55

Automobile Dealers Industrial Relations
Association of New York, Inc. (New York,
N. Y.)

Auto Workers (Ind.)

1,500

54

Grand Union Co. ( Westport, Conn.)

Meat Cutters

1,150

17

National Electrical Contractors Association,
D. C. Chapter (Washington, D.C.)

Electrical Workers
(IBEW)

3,100

17

Sheet Metal and Air Conditioning Con­
tractors National Association of St. Louis
(Missouri)

Sheet Metal Workers

1,350

48

Illinois Bell Telephone Co. (Illinois and
Indiana)

|

Electrical Workers
(IBEW)

15,000

Month of
expiration

SIC
2
code

July—
Continued

August..............

September . . . .

O cto b er............

December . . . .

Company and location

Approximate
number of
workers
covered

17

Sheet Metal and Air Conditioning
Contractors Association of Southern
California, Inc. (California)

Sheet Metal Workers

3,050

16

Southern Illinois Contractors' Association
(Illinois)

Laborers

4,000

54

Retail Meat Markets (Michigan)

Meat Cutters

1,500

54

Washington, D.C., Food Employers Labor
Relations Association (Metropolitan area
of D.C.)

Retail Clerks

13,000

49

Wisconsin Electric Power Co. (Wisconsin)

Electrical Workers
(IBEW)

1,150

35

Worthington-C E I, Inc. (Buffalo, N.Y.)

Steelworkers

1,100

65

Building Managers Association of
Chicago (Illinois)

Service Employees

6,000

54

Great Altantic and Pacific Tea Co., Inc.
Pittsburgh Unit (Interstate)

Meat Cutters

1,800

33

Kennecott Copper Co., Inc., Chase Brass
and Copper Co. (Cleveland, Ohio)

Machinists

1,300

54

Kroger Co. (Pennsylvania and Ohio)

Meat Cutters

2,200

44

Philadelphia Marine Trade Association
(Atlantic Coast)

Longshoremen's
Association

5,000

54

Retail Meat Cutters Contract (Chicago, III.)

Meat Cutters

4,000

54

Retail Meat Cutters (Self-Service) (Chicago,
III.)

Meat Cutters

1,500

33

Mueller Brass Co. (Port Huron, Mich.)

Auto Workers (Ind.)

1,450

33

National Distillers and Chemical Corp.,
Bridgeport Brass Co. (Bridgeport, Conn.)

Brass Workers
(Directly Affiliated)

1,200

55

Independent Service Station Operators
(California)

International Brother­
hood of Service
Station Operators
of America (Ind.)

1,200

E x p ira tio n s rep o rted to o late to be in cluded in tables 7 and 8.
See app e n d ix B fo r d e fin itio n o f codes.
U n io n a ffilia te d w ith A F L -C IO , e x c e p t w h ere no ted as in d e p e n d e n t (In d .) .




Union 3

A p p e n d ix A
Common Abbreviations

AGC
AM
ASSN
ASSOC
BALT
BLDG
BLDRS
CALIF
CHI
CIN
CLEVE
CONN
CONSOL
CONT
GENL
I-A

ILL
IND
INDUS
INTL
LA
MASS




- Associated General Contractors
- American
- Association
- Associated
- Baltimore
■ Building
- Builders
- California
- Chicago
- Cincinnati
- Cleveland
- Connecticut
- Consolidated
- Continental
- General
- Industry area (group
of companies signing
same contract)
- Illinois
- Independent
- Industrial
- International
- Los Angeles
- Massachusetts

MECH
METRO
MFRS
MICH
MINPLS
MINN
NATL
NEW ENG
NJ
NY
NO
NORTHW
PA
PHILA
PITTSB
SAN FRAN
SO
SOUTHE
SOUTHW
STRUCT
US
WASH
WEST VA
WIS

- Mechanical
- Metropolitan
- Manufacturers
- Michigan
- Minneapolis
- Minnesota
- National
- New England
- New Jersey
- New York
- Northern
- Northwestern
- Pennsylvania
- Philadelphia
- Pittsburgh
- San Francisco
- Southern
- Southeastern
- Southwestern
- Structural
- United States
- Washington
- West Virginia
- Wisconsin

A ppendix B

Definition of Codes
SIC Codes
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
44
45
48
49
50

Fisheries
Metal mining
Anthracite mining
Bituminous coal and lignite mining
Crude petroleum and natural gas
Mining and quarrying of nonmetallic minerals, except fuels
Building construction— general contractors
Construction other than building construction— general contractors
Construction— special trade contractors
Ordnance and accessories
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products
Apparel and other finished products made from fabrics and similar materials
Lumber and wood products, except furniture
Furniture and fixtures
Paper and allied products
Printing, publishing, and allied industries
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum refining and related industries
Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products
Leather and leather products
Stone, clay, glass, and concrete products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products, except ordnance, machinery, and transportation equipment
Machinery, except electrical
Electrical machinery, equipment, and supplies
Transportation equipment
Professional, scientific, and controlling instruments; photographic and optical goods;
watches and clocks
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Railroad teansportation
Local and suburban transit and interurban passenger transportation
Motor freight transportation and warehousing
Water transportation
Air transportation
Communication
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
Wholesale trade




SIC Codes— Continued
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
70
72
73
75
76
78
79
80
81
82
84
86
88
89

Retail trade— building materials, hardware, and farm equipment dealers
Retail trade— general merchandise
Retail trade— food stores
Retail trade— automotive dealers and gasoline service stations
Retail trade— apparel and accessory stores
Retail trade— furniture, home furnishings, and equipment stores
Retail trade— eating and drinking places
Retail trade— miscellaneous retail stores
Banking
Credit agencies other than banks
Security and commodity brokers, dealers, exchanges, and services
Insurance carriers
Insurance agents, brokers, and service
Real estate
Combinations of real estate, insurance, loans, law offices
Holding and other investment companies
Hotels, rooming houses, camps, and other lodging places
Personal services
Miscellaneous business services
Automobile repair, automobile services, and garages
Miscellaneous repair services
Motion pictures
Amusement and recreation services, except motion pictures
Medical and other health services
Legal services
Educational services
Museums, art galleries, botanical and zoological gardens
Nonprofit membership organizations
Private households
Miscellaneous services




10 NEW ENGLAND REGION
11 Maine
12 New Hampshire
13 Vermont
14 Massachusetts
15 Rhode Island
16 Connecticut

20 MIDDLE ATLANTIC
21 New York
22 New Jersey
23 Pennsylvania

30 EAST NORTH CENTRAL REGION
31 Ohio
32 Indiana
33 Illinois
34 Michigan
35 Wisconsin

40 WEST NORTH CENTRAL REGION
41 Minnesota
42 Iowa
43 Missouri
44 North Dakota
45 South Dakota
46 Nebraska
47 Kansas

50 SOUTH ATLANTIC REGION
51 Delaware
52 Maryland
53 District of Columbia
54 Virginia
55 West Virginia
56 North Carolina

50
57
58
59

SOUTH ATLANTIC REGION— Continued
South Carolina
Georgia
Florida

60
61
62
63
64

EAST SOUTH CENTRAL REGION
Kentucky
Tennessee
Alabama
Mississippi

70 WEST SOUTH CENTRAL REGION
71 Arkansas
72 Louisiana
73 Oklahoma
74 Texas

80 MOUNTAIN REGION
81 Montana
82 Idaho
83 Wyoming
84 Colorado
85 New Mexico
86 Arizona
87 Utah
88 Nevada

90 PACIFIC REGION
91 Washington
92 Oregon
93 California
94 Alaska
95 Hawaii
OTHER AREAS
00 Interstate

NOTE: Agreements covering employees or operations wholly within one State will be designated by the State
code listed.
The regional code (10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, or 90) is used where an agreement covers employees or opera­
tions in two States or more but does not go beyond the limits of the regions.
The interstate code (00) is used where the agreement covers employees or operations in two States or more in
more than one region.




100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
112
114
115
116
118
119
120
121
122
124
126
127
128
129
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
150
152
153
154
155
158




Two or more AFL—CIO Unions
Directly Affilliated Unions of
the AFL—CIO
Actors
Air line Dispatchers
Air line Pilots
Engineers; Professional and Technical
Asbestos Workers
Industrial Workers; Allied
Bakery Workers
Barbers
Boilermakers
Brick and Clay Workers
Bricklayers
IronWorkers
Service Employees
Carpenters
Cement Workers
Chemical Workers
Cigar Makers
Coopers
Distillery Workers
Electrical Workers (IBEW)
Elevator Constructors
Engineers; Operating
Fire Fighters
Firemen and Oilers
Garment Workers; United
Garment Workers; Ladies
Glass Bottle Blowers
Glass Cutters
Glass Workers; Flint
Government Employees
Granite Cutters
Leather, Plastic, and Novelty Workers
Hatters
Laborers
Horseshoers
Hotel and Restaurant Employees
Jewelry Workers
Lathers
Letter Carriers
Maintenance of Way Employes
Marble, Slate, and Stone Polishers
Masters, Mates, and Pilots
Meat Cutters
Metal Polishers
Union codes 100-400 are affiliated with AFL-CIO.

161
162
163
164
166
168
169
170
174
178
180
181
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
192
193
196
197
199
201
202
203
204
205
208
210
215
218
220
221
231
232
233
236
238
239
241
243
244
305

Molders
Musicians
Office Employees
Painters
Pattern Makers
Plasterers and Cement Masons
Plate Printers
Plumbers
Potters
Railroad Signalmen
Railroad Yardmasters
Railway Carmen
Railway Clerks
Retail Clerks
Roofers
Seafarers
Sheet Metal Workers
Shoe Workers; Boot and
Siderographers
Porters; Sleeping Car
Stage Employees
State, County, and Municipal
Employees
Stove Workers
Transit Union; Amalgamated
Teachers
Telegraphers
Textile Workers; United
Tobacco Workers
Typographical Union
Upholsterers
Grain Millers
Match Workers Council
Flight Engineers
Machinists
Aluminum Workers
Toy Workers
Paperworkers
Train Dispatchers
Railway and Airline Supervisors
Laundry and Dry Cleaning Union
Insurance Workers
Longshoremen’s Association
Farm Workers of America; United
Graphic Arts
Printing and Graphic
Clothing Workers

312
314
319
320
321
323
332
333
334
335
337
341
342
343
345
346
347
352
354
356
357
358
360
400
404
412
414
415
417
419
423
425
442
449
454
461
465
469
470
480
484
490
494
500
516

Furniture Workers
Glass and Ceramic Workers
Marine Engineers
Marine and Shipbuilding Workers
Maritime Union; National
Newspaper Guild
Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store
Rubber Workers
Shoe Workers; United
Steelworkers
Textile Workers Union
Transport Workers
Utility Workers
Woodworkers
Radio Association
Communications Workers
Electrical Workers (IUE)
Broadcast Employees and Technicians
Mechanics Educational Society
Leather Workers
Oil, Chemical, and Atomic Workers
Transportation Union; United
Postal Workers
Two or More Independent Unions
Die Sinkers
Lace Operatives
Insurance Agents
Locomotive Engineers
Machine Printers
Mailers
Distributive Workers
Newspaper and Mail Deliverers
Shoe Craftsmen
Watch Workers
Mine Workers
Guard Workers; Plant
Christian Labor Association
Utility Workers of New England
Atlantic Independent Union
Longshoremen and Warehousemen
Electrical Workers (UE)
Protection Employees; Plant
Watchmen’s Association
Single Firm Independent
Union
Telephone Unions;
Independent
1 Union codes 100-400 are affiliated with AFL-CIO.




517
518
519
520
521
524
526
527
528
529
530
531
.533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
547
551
553
600

701
702
704
705
708
715
717
824
903
904
905
906
907
908

Baseball Players
Basketball Players
Hockey Players
Football Players
Umpires
Packinghouse and Dairy
Workers
Professional Services
Pulp and Paper; Western
Southern Labor Union
Western States Serivce
Writers Guild (East and West)
Teamsters
Laundry, Dry Cleaning, and
Dyehouse Workers
Tool Craftsmen
Industrial Workers
Industrial Trade
Trades and Crafts
Independent Unions; Congress of
Retail Workers
Directors Guild
Guards Union
Truck Drivers; Chicago
Allied Workers
Licensed Officers’ Organization;
Great Lakes
Textile Foremen’s Guild
Auto Workers
Two or More Unions— Different
Affiliations (i.e.. AFL-CIO and
Independent Unions)
Engineers and Architects
Industrial Trades
Office, Sales and Technical Employees
Shoe workers Protective Association
Texas Unions
Industrial Union; Amalgamated
Mine Workers; Progressive
Technical Skills Association
Nurses; American
Licensed Practical Nurses
Nurses’ Associations (Other
than ANA and NFLPM)
Doctors’ Associations
Single Independent Assocations
Association and Union

1
2
3
4

Single company.
Association agreement.
Industry area agreement (i.e., group of companies signing the same agreement; no formal
association).
Single company (multiplant) agreement.




A ppendix C.

Data shown in tables 7 and 8 of this bulletin, listing
individual collective bargaining agreements on file with
the Bureau of Labor Statistics, differ from the totals
presented earlier in tables 1 and 2 for a variety of reasons.
Data in tables 1 and 2 include, in addition to those agree­
ments on file, information on collective bargaining agree­
ments from other sources, such as press accounts and
direct communication with union and management. Ad­
ditionally, a collective bargaining situation included in
tables 1 and 2 is defined as a bargaining unit covering
a total of 1,000 workers or more. The results of bargain­
ing in such a unit, when for example multi-employer
or multi-union groups are involved, may be two or
more separate collective bargaining agreements each
affecting fewer than 1,000 workers. In such cases,
the agreements are jointly negotiated and have uniform
terms including a common expiration date.
Differences may also exist in employment coverage,
as data in tables 7 and 8 reflect employment obtained at

GPO

875-698




Explanatory N ote

the time of the contract is received by the Bureau, while
data in tables 1 and 2 reflect the most recent employment
available at the time this article is prepared. Changes in
worker coverage totals, in turn, may result in changes in
the number of situations classified as “major,” that is,
those applying to 1,000 workers or more. Finally, con­
tracts covering the railroad and airline industries are not
included in the Bureau’s agreement file, but are included
in tables 1 and 2.
To reconcile the differences between data presented in
tables 7 and 8 and in 1 and 2, supplemental tables 9 and
10 have been prepared. They list situations included in
tables 1 and 2, but not 7 and 8, and are based upon the
concepts used in preparing the former tables. Because of
the reasons listed earlier in the note regarding employ­
ment differences, absolute comparability is not possible.
However, the supplemental tables do aid in reconciling
differences between the two series of data.

BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS
REGIONAL OFFICES

Region V

Region I

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Regions VII and VIII are serviced by Kansas City
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