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Attending a meeting of the executive council of the AFL-CIO in Miami, President Nixon was more cordially received by labor than a year ago, when he was virtually snubbed by George Meany (see THE ECONOMY). But his amiable relations with the unions did not prevent the AFL-CIO hierarchy from issuing a statement protesting his budget: "The Federal Government's commitment to help solve the nation's major domestic problems is seriously endangered. Essential programs to strengthen American society and improve the quality of life are in jeopardy...
...months in office, the President had rarely been more visible or voluble. After a weekend in Florida ("I was happy to bring the boys home," he said during a visit to the Mayport Naval Station), Nixon planned a meeting with AFL-CIO President George Meany, then an address to the South Carolina state legislature. In his moment of triumph, Nixon seemed less calculating, more casual than usual. The relaxed mood appeared to be catching. Finishing her dinner at Trader Vic's, Pat Nixon lit up her first cigarette in public since her husband took office. To Washington observers...
Open Door. A humble servant to Hoffa all through his labor life, a man whom AFL-CIO President George Meany had called a puppet, Fitz suddenly leaned back in Jimmy's big white chair in the Teamsters' marble palace in Washington and decided that he liked the feel of the job. More important, President Nixon liked Fitz in the job. Seeking labor support for his reelection, the President dropped by a Teamsters executive board meeting in Miami Beach that June of 1971 to pay his respects to the new boss personally. Said Nixon: "My door is always open...
Officials of five Massachusetts labor organizations, including the New England regional AFL-CIO and the Massachusetts Labor Council, presented the ACWA's case to members of the Coop's board of directors in January, Robert Wiseman, regional coordinator of the AGWA, said yesterday...
Dunlop will have high-level help. The COLC will be advised by an elite committee of five union chiefs and five leaders of blue-ribbon corporations. Crusty AFL-CIO President Meany, who stormed off the Pay Board a year ago, has agreed to serve on the committee. So have Steelworkers President I.W. Abel, Teamsters President Frank Fitzsimmons, Seafarers President Paul Hall and UAW Chief Leonard Woodcock. The business members are Stephen Bechtel Jr., president of Bechtel Corp., a huge engineering and construction firm; Edward Carter, chairman of the Broadway-Hale department-store chain; R. Heath Larry, vice chairman...