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...strike against the Baltimore Sun papers had promised to drag on in definitely; in five weeks, negotiations between management and the American Newspaper Guild had made no noticeable progress. Then, suddenly, the strike was all but over. Not a single Guildsman was back at work last week, but the Sun still managed to publish morning and evening papers. "Things from our point of view are very bright," said Promotion Director Rob ert Kavanaugh. "We have a sufficient complement to put out the papers as our people know them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Strikes: Back to Print in Baltimore | 6/4/1965 | See Source »

...members, said Brown, were violating their contract with the Sun by refusing to cross the picket line. "The Newspaper Guild," he complained in a telegram to his Baltimore local, "has taken an uncompromising position in its negotiations with management," a surprising comment from the boss of a union whose New York local had pre cipitated a 114-day New York news paper strike two years ago that helped kill one paper. "Members of Baltimore Typographical Union," Brown went on to say, "owe their first loyalty to the ITU. Any member returning to work under the current contract would be upholding...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Strikes: Back to Print in Baltimore | 6/4/1965 | See Source »

After 16 years, the Baltimore Guild has grown stubborn itself. It is putting up a stiff fight against management and it feels it is on firm ground. The wealthy Sun papers-the Sun, Evening Sun, and Sunday Sun-carry almost as much advertising linage as the New York Times. By spending lavishly on news coverage, they make just about everybody's list of top papers in the U.S. But they spend precious little on their own employees. They pay a top minimum of $150 a week for experienced reporters; 61 U.S. papers pay higher salaries, including the Kenosha News...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Stubbornness in Baltimore | 5/21/1965 | See Source »

Help from Washington. The present fracas dates back to last February when the Baltimore Guild merged with the far more militant Washington Guild, which had already won a $200-a-week minimum for Washington Post reporters. During acrimonious contract negotiations, handled by a veteran Washington negotiator, the Guild asked for a $172-a-week minimum and a union shop. But the best offer from management was a $10-a-week raise and no union security. Negotiations heated up and stalled. "The Sun people," said an observer, "are not used to people talking to them like that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Stubbornness in Baltimore | 5/21/1965 | See Source »

Advertising Boycott. Meanwhile, there have been feeble attempts to supply Baltimore with an interim newspaper. The Guild puts out a small daily tabloid, the Baltimore Banner, for which Sun staffers scrape up news from radio and television. But local merchants, friendly to the Sun, provide little advertising and the Banner is losing more than $4,000 a week. A second daily, the New Baltimore Morning Herald, published by Johns Hopkins students' with coed assistance on weekends, has also been hard put to find advertising in a town where the Sun has long been king. But the city...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Stubbornness in Baltimore | 5/21/1965 | See Source »

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