Word: haywood
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Down in Bradenton, Fla., the Boston Red Sox and the Milwaukee Braves battled eleven innings before settling for a 7 to 7 tie in a Grapefruit League game. Red Sox rookie catcher Haywood Sullivan was the batting hero of the day, belting a three-run homer in the seventh inning...
...fourth-quarter drive gave Leverett House's football teams its second straight win yesterday as it defeated Winthrop 9-0. Back Stu Dunsker scored the game's only touchdown and Mike Haywood kicked the extra point. Fred Shure's tackle of a Winthrop back behind the goal line for a safety accounted for the other two points...
Died. Allan Shaw Haywood, 64, who rose from pitboy at 13 to be executive vice president and chief organizer of the C.I.O.; of a heart attack; in Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Hardworking, hard-drinking Allan Haywood, born a miner's son in Yorkshire. England, came to the U.S. in 1906. He followed John L. Lewis and Philip Murray up labor's ladder, recruited unions for the C.I.O., stuck with Murray when Lewis made his trumpeting breakaway in 1942. As right-hand man to ailing President Murray, Haywood seemed heir apparent, but after Murray's death last November...
...United Steelworkers' Union, second in size only to the U.A.W. among C.I.O. member unions, fought Reuther's election implacably, and the Steelworkers' candidate, C.I.O. Vice President Allan S. Haywood, was backed by more unions than Reuther. Among Haywood's supporters, however, were the smaller unions, such unlikely "industrial organizations" as the Barbers & Beauty Culturists, Department Store Workers, the Government and Civic Employees and the United Theatrical Workers. Reuther was backed by most of the big C.I.O. unions, including U.A.W., Rubber Workers, Textile Workers, Amalgamated Clothing Workers, and International Union of Electrical Workers. The vote...
...this week's C.I.O. convention at Atlantic City, C.I.O. bigwigs had failed to reach a behind-the-scenes settlement of the rivalry between the two leading candidates to succeed the late Phil Murray as C.I.O. president: the United Auto Workers' Walter Reuther and C.I.O. Vice President Allan Haywood. Barring a last minute agreement, the C.I.O. seemed in danger of having to choose its president in an open and probably bitter fight on the floor of the convention. Not until the C.I.O. re-established its own unity could it give attention to unification with George Meany's A.F.L...