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L 2. WAGE CALENDAR 1974 Bulletin 1810 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR Bureau of Labor Statistics rv \\ . .. ... ^ 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 1603 JFK Federal Building Government Center Boston, Mass. 02203 Phone: 223-6762 (Area Code 617) Region II 8th Floor, 300 South Wacker Drive Chicago, III. 60606 Phone: 353-1880 (Area Code 312) Region VI Suite 3400 1515 Broadway New York, N.Y. 10036 Phone: 971-5405 (Area Code 212) 1100 Commerce St., Rm. 6B7 Dallas, Tex. 75202 Phone: 749-3516 (Area Code 214) Regions VII and VIII * Region III P.O. Box 13309 Philadelphia, Pa. 19101 Phone: 597-1154 (Area Code 215) Regions IX and X ** Region IV Suite 540 1371 Peachtree St., NE. Atlanta, Ga. 30309 Phone: 526-5418 (Area Code 404) Federal Office Building 911 Walnut St., 15th Floor Kansas City, Mo. 64106 Phone: 374-2481 (Area Code 816) 450 Golden Gate Ave. Box 36017 San Francisco, Calif. 94102 Phone: 556-4678 (Area Code 415) Regions VII and VIII are serviced by Kansas City Regions IX and X are serviced by San Francisco