Word: glovers
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Union Boss Arthur J. Glover and his boys were strictly small fry beside the railroad brotherhoods, but Art's ambition was to be a bush league John L. Lewis. He figured that he could enhance his power and show up the big boys if he beat the trainmen and conductors to a 40-hour week at full 48-hours' pay-a demand turned down by a presidential fact-finding board. Even after the Korean invasion, Art kept the strike going. The National Mediation Board asked him to end it for the good of the country, but Art refused...
Last week Harry Truman threw the switch on ambitious Art Glover. The President condemned the strike as unjustified and threatened to step in if the men did not get back to work. Since the U.S. was not at war, the President did not invoke Korea as his justification; the stoppage of food shipments, he said, was reason enough to end the strike...
...Glover, once a switchman himself, could still read a red signal when he saw it. Within nine hours, he called an end to the strike on the Great Northern, the Chicago Great Western, the Denver & Rio Grande Western and the Western Pacific...
...President's reaction was quick: he seized the 8,000-mile Rock Island and ordered the Army to run it. Art balked and the U.S. promptly slapped an injunction on the union. That was too much for Art Glover. After grumbling a few hours, he called off the Rock Island strike...
Between 73-year-old Grand Chief Johnston and 72-year-old David Robertson, the wrinkled little chief of the firemen, there has been a long rivalry; they were trying to outdo each other as tough labor leaders. A. J. Glover, the big-boned boss of the switchmen, was newly elected; he also was trying to make a show with his rank & file. But all three leaders were chiefly resentful because railway wages had not kept pace with other industrial wages. Railway workers are no longer at the top of the labor heap. For oldtimers like Johnston and Robertson, this...