-
Index o f Volumes 72-83 Monthly Labor ReviewJanuary 1951 to
December 1960
Bulletin N o. 1335UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
W. Willard W irti, SecretaryBUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS
Ewan Clagae, Commiuioncr
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Index of Volumes 72-83 Monthly Labor ReviewJanuary 1951 to
December 1960
Bulletin No. 1335August 1962
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR W . Willard Wirtz,
Secretary
BUREAU OP LABOR STATISTICS Ewan Clague, Commissioner
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PR EFAC E
This publication is an index of all parts of the Monthly Labor
Review from January 1951 through December 1960 excepting the
statistical series appearing in the department Current Labor
Statistics and the individual items in The Labor Month in Review,
the Chronology of Recent Labor Events, and Developments in
Industrial Relations. Two statistical supplementsto the 1959 and
1960 issueswere issued in this 10-year period, but these also are
not indexed.
The planning of this indexand much of the work entailed in
compiling itwas done by Irene B. Reedy, who is managing editor of
the Review.
Previous bulletins in this series are No. 695 for volumes 1-11
(July 1915 to December 1920), No. 696 for volumes 12-51 (January
1921 to December 1940), and No. 1080 for volumes 52-71 (January
1941 to December 1950).
( m )
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ContentsPage
Articles and technical
notes_________________________________________ 1Book
reviews______________ -
_____________________________________________________ 31Court
decisions___________________________________________________________________
40Government agency
rulings_______________________________________________________
53
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Index of Volumes 72-83 Monthly Labor Review
January 1951 to December 1960
A R TIC LES A N D T E C H N IC A L N OTES
ABSENTEEISM (see also Employee behavior, foreign countries)
:
Sickness Absenteeism in the New York Telephone Co.1955July
798-800.
Sickness Absenteeism Under GM Corp. Group Insurance Plan.
1952Jan. 38-40.
Accident and sickness benefits. See under Collective bargaining
agreementsEmployee-benefit plans.
Accident compensation or insurance. See Workmens
compensation.
Accident prevention. See Occupational safety.Accident
statistics. See Work injuries.Age (see also Older workers;
ProductivityAge and job
performance). Influence of Age on Saving and Spending Patterns.
1955Nov. 1240-1244.
Agricultural implements. See EmploymentDiscrimination ; and
under Wage chronologies.
Agriculture (see also Fair Labor Standards Act; Income and
expenditures, consumerLow income groups; Labor forceWest Coast;
Labor standards and programs; Legislation, FederalMigratory labor;
Migration and migratory workers; and under Labor force). Research
on the Effects of Industrialization in Rural Areas. 1958Oct.
1121-1124.
Aircraft. See under Collective bargaining agreements;
Employment; Training; Wage chronologies; Wages and hours.
Airlines. See under Automation and technological change ;
Collective bargaining ; Manpower.
Alaska (see also specific subjects). Bibliography on Labor
Conditions, Labor Problems, Labor Economics.1955Dec. 1440,
1443-1444.
Aluminum. See under Wage chronologies.American Federation of
Labor and Congress of Industrial
Organizations. See Labor organizations; and under Collective
bargaining.
Apparel. See under Automation and technological change; Wage
chronologies; Wages and hours.
Appliances. See Prices, consumerAutomobiles. Apprentices and
learners. See Training.Arbitration and mediation, United States
(see also Indus
trial relations; and under Collective bargaining agreements)
:
Arbitration:Arbitration and Industrial Jurisprudence. 1958
Aug. 866-867.Code of Ethics and Procedure for Arbitrators.
1951
Mar. 271-276.Patterns and Problems in Labor Arbitration.
1959
Nov. 1225-1227.Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service:
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Since 1947. 1958Apr.
388-392.
Arbitration and mediation, United StatesContinued Federal
Mediation and Conciliation ServiceContinued
Report of Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, 1958.
1959Apr. 408-410.
Grievances:Arbitration of Discharges and the Reinstated
Worker: Work Experience of Reinstated Employees. Considerations
in Discharge cases.1957June 677-688.
Arbitration of Discipline Grievances. 1954June 623-628.
Is the Arbitrator Managements Friend in Discipline Cases?
1959Apr. 373-375.
Mediation. The Function of Mediation in Labor Relations.
1952Mar. 275-278.
Transportation. Fifty Years of Labor Arbitration in Cleveland
Transit. 1960May 464-471.
West Coast. The Use of Arbitration. 1959May 543- 546.
Arbitration and mediation, territories. A Wage Award on the
Alaska Railroad. 1958 Sept. 965-973.
Atomic energy:Labor Implications of Peaceful Uses of Atomic
Energy.
1957Aug. 921-931.Workmens Compensation and Radiation
Hazards.
1957Apr. 455-459.Atomic Energy Commission (see also Atomic
energy).
Labor and the Savannah River AEC Project: Pt. I Manpower and
Wages; Pt. IIUnionization and Industrial Relations; Pt. I l
lHousing and Changes in Population; Pt. IVCommunity Facilities and
Social Changes. 1952June 629-639, July 12-21, Aug. 150- 158, Sept.
269-278.
Atomic radiation. See under Occupational safety; Workmens
compensation.
Automation and technological change (see also Collective
bargaining agreementsAutomation) :
Agriculture. Effects of Chemistry and Technology on the
Agricultural Labor Force. 1952June 676- 677.
Airlines. Adjustment to an Automatic Airline Reservation System.
1958 Sept. 1014-1016.
Apparel. Plant Level Adjustments to Technical Change. 1953Apr.
387-391.
Automobiles. Impact of Automation on Ford-UAW Relationships.
1958June 612-615.
Bakery. Adjustment to Automation in a Large Bakery.1956 Sept.
1037-1040.
Electronic data processing:Experiences With the Introduction of
Office Automa
tion. 1960Apr. 376-380.(1)
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2Automation and technological change Continued Electronic data
processingContinued
Office Automation in the Federal Government. 1960 Sept.
933-938.
The Reactions of Employees to Office Automation. 1960Sept.
925-932.
Implications o f:Impact of Technological Progress on Labor and
Social
Policy. 1957July 841-845.Industrial and Economic Implications of
Automation.
1955 May 539-523.An Inquiry Into the Effects of Automation.
1956
Jan. 7-14.Integrating Automation Into Our Economy. 1955
May 526-527.Labors Aims in Adjusting to the New Technology:
Filling the Demand for Manpower. Economic and Social
Implications. 1959Feb. 160-165.
A Review of Automatic Technology. 1955June 637-644.
Social Implications of Technological Progress.1956 Dec.
1415-1418.
A Theory of the Production and Service Processes.1955May
524-525.
Industrial relations. Automation: A New Dimension to Old
Problems. 1955Feb. 165-169.
Insurance. Adjustments to Automation in Two Firms.1956Jan.
15-19.
Petroleum refining. Labor Adjustments for Changes in Technology
at an Oil Refinery. 1957 Sept. 1083- 1087.
Radio and television sets. Adjustments to Automation in Two
Firms. 1956Jan. 15-19.
Railroads. Maintenance of Way Employment: I Technological
Displacement in Employment and Possible Moderating Measures;
IICyclical and Seasonal Instability and Possible Remedial Measures.
1957Oct. 1177-1182, Nov. 1315-1320.
Rubber. Wage-Rate Determination in an Automated Rubber Plant.
1958June 610-611.
Workers Health in an Era of Automation. 1956July 819-823.
Automobile repair shops. See under Wages and hours. Automobiles.
See Collective bargaining agreementsEm
ployee-benefit plans, Health and welfare; Handicapped
workersFord, etc.; Wages and hoursMotor vehicles; and under
Absenteeism; Automation and technological change; Collective
bargaining; Employment ; Prices, consumer; Unemployment benefit
plans, supplemental; Wage chronologies.
Automotive parts. See under Wages and hours.
BAKING INDUSTRY. See under Automation and technological change;
Wages and hours.
Banks, labor:Status in 1950. 1951Apr. 413.Status in 1951.
1952Apr. 425-426.
Benefits and benefit plans. See Collective bargaining
agreementsEmployee-benefit plans; Health, welfare, and pension
plans; Unemployment benefit plans, supplemental; Wage chronologies;
Wages and related benefits; and specific industries under Wages and
hours.
Bibliographies:A Bibliography on Labor in National
Emergencies.
1951Oct. 414-419.Puerto Rico and territories. Bibliography on
Labor
Conditions, Labor Problems, Labor Economics.1955Dec.
1440-1445.
Biologists. See Labor mobilityChemists, etc. Boiler-shop
products. See Work injuriesFrequency and
severity rates.
Budgets:BLS program. Standard Budgets and Comparisons of
Living Costs. 1959 Sept. 967, 970-972.City workers fam ily:
Changes in Estimating City Workers Family Budget.1951 Feb.
193-194.
City Workers Family Budget for October 1951.1952 May
520-522.
Estimating Equivalent Incomes or Budget Costs by Family Type.
1960Nov. 1197-1200.
Family Budget of City Worker, October 1950. 1951 Feb.
152-155.
The Interim City Workers Family Budget. 1960 Aug. 785-808.
Elderly couple:Budget for an Elderly Couple; Estimated Cost,
Oc
tober 1950. 1951 Sept. 304-306.Estimating a Budget for an
Elderly Couple. 1951
Sept. 309-310.The BLS Interim Budget for a Retired Couple.
1960Nov. 1141-1157.Building. See Construction; Housing;
Productivity
Labor requirements.Building trades. See under Wages and
hours.Bureau of Labor Statistics:
The Academician and the Bureau Seventy Years Later.1955Jan.
43-44.
Biographical Sketches of Commissioners of the BLS.1955Jan.
49-50.
BLS Contributions to Statistical Work in Other Countries.
1955Jan. 26-29.
The BLS ProgramA Review and Some Suggestions.1955Jan. 31-33.
Carroll D. Wright and His Influence on the BLS.1955Jan.
3-10.
The Development of Index Numbers in the BLS.1955Jan. 20-25.
The Economic Analysts Desire for Certain Program Expansion.
1955Jan. 48.
An Evaluation of the Changing Character of the BLS Program.
1955Jan. 11-18.
How the CIO Evaluates the Bureaus Work and Program. 1955Jan.
36-37.
A Labor Appraisal of BLS Functions in the Collective Bargaining
Field. 1955Jan. 34-35.
Legislative Action and Its Reliance on BLS Assistance.1955Jan.
45.
The Limitations of Factfinding in Collective Bargaining.
1955Jan. 46-47.
The Private Research Agency and Its Need for BLS Material.
1955Jan. 41-42.
Programs and survey techniques. See BLS statistics and' BLS
program under specific subjects.
Some Management Opinions About BLS Data and Their Uses. 1955Jan.
38.
What Writers Feel About BLS and Want It To Do.1955Jan.
39-40.
CALLBACK PAY. See under Collective bargaining agreements.
Candy. See under Wages and hours.Canning and preserving. See
Work injuriesFrequency
and severity rates.Cement. See under Collective bargaining
agreements. Checkoff arrangements. See Collective bargaining
agree
mentsUnion security,.Chemicals, industrial. See under
Employment; Wage
chronologies; Wages and hours.Chemists and chemical engineers.
See under Labor
mobility; Manpower.Children. See Youth.Clay products,
structural. See under Wages and hours. Clothing, work. See Wages
and hoursApparel.
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3Coats and suits, womens. See Wages and hours Apparel.
Co-determination:Bolivia. Worker Participation in the Bolivian
Tin
Industry. 1955Jan. 85.West Germany:
Co-determination for Government Workers in West Germany.
1955Dec. 1470-1471.
Co-determination in Western Germany. 1951Dec. 649-656.
Expansion of Co-determination in West German Industry. 1953Apr.
393-395.
Coffee. See Prices, consumerFood.Collective bargaining, United
States (see also Arbitration
and mediation; Collective bargaining agreements; Industrial
relations; Labor-management disputes):
AFL-CIO merger. The Effects of the AFL-CIO Merger.1956 Feb.
174-175.
Airlines. Mutual Strike Aid in the Airlines. 1960 June
589-591.
Atomic energy. See that title.Automobiles:
American Motors Approach to the Labor Contract.1956Apr.
421-424.
Bargaining Cooperation Among Auto Managements. 1960June
592-594.
The 1958 Bargaining Programs for the Automobile Workers.
1958Mar. 270-274.
Bargaining obligation. The Employers Duty to Supply Data for
Collective Bargaining. 1952Oct.381-387.
Bargaining power:The Monopolistic Power of Labor Unions.
1956
Feb. 161-163.The Power of Organized Labor. 1956Feb. 173.
BLS program:How the CIO Evaluates the Bureaus Work and
Program. 1955Jan. 36-37.A Labor Appraisal of BLS Functions in
the Collective
Bargaining Field. 1955Jan. 34-35.The Limitations of Factfinding
in Collective Bargain
ing. 1955Jan. 46-47.Some Management Opinions About BLS Data
and
Their Uses. 1955Jan. 38.Construction. Trends in Bargaining in
the Northwest
Construction Industry. 1954Nov. 1214-1219. Decisionmaking Under
Collective Bargaining. 1957
Sept. 1059-1063.Defense economy. See Defense mobilization and
pol
iciesCollective bargaining.The Economic Climate of Collective
Bargaining.
1960Aug. 837-840.Footwear. New England: Collective Bargaining
and
Competitive Cost in the Shoe Industry. 1957 Mar. 310-315.
Foreign trade:Foreign Trade and Collective Bargaining. 1960
July 693-699.Union Views on Fair Labor Standards in Foreign
Trade. 1690Oct. 1025-1030.Government, Federal:
The Governments Industrial Employees: IIConsultation,
Bargaining, and Wage Determination.1954Mar. 249-256.
Governments Role in Wage Determination on Inland Waterways.
1954Mar. 257-262.
Health and welfare plans. Negotiation and Administration of
Health and Welfare Programs: Scope and Operation. Preparation for
Bargaining.1957 May 576-581.
Labor peace:Causes of Labor Peace Under Collective
Bargaining.
1954Feb. 170-173.Factors in Successful Collective Bargaining.
1952
Mar. 278-279.
Collective bargaining, United StatesContinuedLabors Public
Responsibility: The Recognition of Na
tional Economic Interests in Bargaining. Growth of Social
Consciousness in Internal Union Affairs. 1960Jan. 18-25.
Labor Status and Collective Bargaining. 1956June 647-653.
Management cooperation (see also Airlines, Automobiles, Steel,
this section). An Appraisal of Management Cooperation. 1960June
595-597.
Managements Reserved Rights Under Collective Bargaining : An
Industry Officials View. A Labor Officials View. 1956Oct.
1168-1174.
New England. See Footwear, this section.Productivity,
worker-management cooperation. A New
Approach to Collective Bargaining. 1958Mar. 282-283.
Public employees:Collective Bargaining and Work Stoppages
Involving
Teachers. 1953May 475-479.Implications for Collective Bargaining
in Quasi-Pub
lic Work. 1952Mar. 257-262.Trends in Labor Legislation for
Public Employees.
1960Bee. 1293-1296.Steel. Company Cooperation in Basic Steel
Bargaining.
1960June 586-588.Trends. Bargaining Trends in the Last Two
Decades.
1956Feb. 172.Wages. Chamber of Commerce Industrial Relations
Session, 1953: Wage Movements and Collective Bargaining.
1954Jau. 23-25.
Collective bargaining, foreign countries:French Measures
Favoring Collective Bargaining.
1955Aug. 915-916.The West German Wage Movement in 1954. 1955
Mar. 311-314.Collective bargaining agreements (see also
Collective bar
gaining ; Labor-management disputes; Wage chronologies) :
Accident and sickness benefits. See under Employee- benefit
plans, this section.
Aircraft. Collective Bargaining and Agreements in the Aircraft
Industry. 1951Dec. 664-668.
Arbitration Provisions in Collective Agreements, 1952.1953Mar.
261-266. (See also Grievances, this section. )
Automation. Longshoring and Meatpacking Automation Settlements.
1959Oct. 1108-1110.
Automobiles. The 1955 Ford and General Motors Union Contracts.
1955Aug. 875-881.
Benefit plans. See Employee-benefit plans, this section.BLS
statistics. The Collection and Analysis of Collec
tive Bargaining Agreements. 1955June 673-678.Callback pay.
Reporting and Call-Back Pay in Collec
tive Bargaining Agreements. 1954Dec. 1334- 1340.
Cement. Labor-Management Relations in the Cement Industry.
1951Jan. 17-21.
Characteristics (see also Aircraft, this section) :
Characteristics of 12,000 Labor-Management Con
tracts [1950]. 1951July 31-35.Characteristics of Major Union
Contracts [January
1956]. 1956July 805-811.Collective Agreements in the Radio and
Related Prod
ucts Industry. 1952Apr. 400-404.Cleanup and clothes-change
time:
Paid Time for Washup, Cleanup, and Clothes Change,1952-53.
1954Apr. 420-423.
Paid Time for Washup, Cleanup, and Clothes Change in 1959.
1960-Sept. 964r-969.
Coverage, extent o f :Collective Bargaining Coverage in Factory
Employ
ment, 1958. 1960Apr. 345-349.Coverage of Collective Agreements
in 17 Labor Mar
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4Collective bargaining agreements ContinuedCoverage, extent
ofContinued
Extent of Collective Agreements in 17 Labor Markets,1953-54.
1955Jan. 64-68.
Extent of Unionization in Major Labor Markets, 1951- 52.
1953Jan. 26-29.
Death in family, leave. See Leave payments, thissection.
Deferred wages. See Wage adjustments, this section.Disability
benefits. See Employee-benefit plans, this
section.Dismissal pay. See Severance pay, this section.Dues
checkoff arrangements. See Union security, this
section.Employee-benefit plans (see also Military service
and
Older workers, this section; Health, welfare, and pension plans;
Wage chronologies; and specific industries under Wages and hours)
:
Accident and sickness benefits:Accident and Sickness Benefits
Under Collective
Bargaining, 1958. 1959June 646-652. Sickness Absenteeism Under
GM Corp. Group In
surance Plan. 1952Jan. 38-40.Health and welfare:
Changes in Selected Health and Insurance Plans, 1954 to 1958.
1958Nov. 1243-1249.
Extension of Health Benefits to Prior Pensioners. 1960Aug.
841-843.
Health and Welfare Plans in the Automobile Industry. 1951 Sept.
277-282.
Health and Welfare Plans in the Basic Steel Industry. 1951Oct.
447-451.
Health and Welfare Plans Negotiated in California, 1953.
195kJan. 11-12.
Hospital Benefits Under Collective Bargaining,1959. 1960Feb.
150-160.
Medical Benefits Under Collective Bargaining, 1959. 1960July
710-717.
Surgical Benefits Under Collective Bargaining, 1959. 1960June
598-604.
Health, welfare, and pensions:Employee-Benefit Plans Under
Collective Bargain
ing, Mid-1950. 1951Feb. 156-162.Health, Insurance, and Pension
Plans in Union
Contracts [1954]. 1955Sept. 993-1000.Mine workers. Four Years of
Operation Under the
UMWA Welfare and Retirement Fund. 1952 Jan. 37-38. Operations
Under the UMWA Welfare and Retirement Fund. 195kNov. 1232-1234.
Pensions:Automobiles. Pension Plans Negotiated by the
UAW-CIO. 195 kJan. 13-15.Characteristics of Pension Plans
[Winter 1957-58].
1958Aug. 845-853.Disability Retirement in Industrial Pension
Plans.
1956Aug. 919-921.Early and Disability Retirement Under
Collective
Bargaining, 1959. 1960Nov. 1176-1183. Electrical workers.
Pension Plan of the AFL Elec
trical Workers, 1954. 195kNov. 1234-1236.Involuntary Retirement
Provisions [1958]. 1959
Aug. 855-860.Labor views. Some Observations of Labor on Re
tirement Security. 1951Dec. 699-702. Normal Retirement
Provisions Under Collective
Bargaining [1959]. 1960Oct. 1052-1061. Pension Plans Under
Collective Bargaining: Pt.
IThe Extent and Nature of Vested Rights in Pension Plans and
Their Relationship to the Problems of Labor Mobility; Pt.
IICompulsory Retirement; Pt. I l lTypes and Amounts of Benefits.
1953Mar. 237-245, May 484-489, July 714-722.
Vesting Provisions in Pension Plans [1958]. 1959 July
743-750.
Collective bargaining agreements Continued Employee-benefit
plansContinued
Sick leave. Paid Sick Leave Provisions in Major Union Contracts,
1959. 1960Oct. 1061-1070.
Sickness benefits. See Employee-benefit plansAccident and
sickness benefits, this section.
Employment stabilization. See Guaranteed Employment, etc., this
section.
Equal job opportunity. See Older workers, this section. Equal
Pay for Equal Work. 1952Jan. 41^5. Escalator clauses. See
Expirations or reopenings and
Wage adjustments, this section. *Expirations or reopenings in
major contracts in
1951-55. 1951June 680-691.1955 (May-Dec.). 1955Apr.
432-439.1956. 1956Jan. 20-30.1957. 1957Jan. 37-49.1958. 1958Jan.
30-44.1959. 1958Dec. 1349-1361.1960. 1959Dec. 1312-1323.1961.
1960Bee. 1257-1267.
Grievances (see also Arbitration etc., this section). Grievance
Procedures in Union Agreements, 195(>- 51. 1951July 36-39.
Guaranteed Employment and Wages Under Collective Agreements.
1952May 555-559.
Health and welfare plans and programs. See Employee- benefit
plans, this section.
Holidays:Holiday Provisions in Union Agreements, 1950.
1951Jan. 24-27.Holiday Provisions in Union Agreements in
1952-53.
195 kFeb. 128-133.Paid Holidays in Major Contracts, 1958.
1959Jan.
26-32.Hours of work (see also Premium pay and Shift differ
entials, this section; and specific industries under Wages and
hours). Hours of Work and Overtime Provisions in Union Contracts.
1958Feb. 133- 141.
Insurance plans. See Employee-benefit plans, this section.
Jury leave. See Leave payments, this section.Layoffs (see also
Older workers and Severance pay,
this section) :Contract Clauses on Seniority as a Factor in
Layoffs.
1955July 766-771.Layoff, Recall, and Work-Sharing Procedures:
Pt.
IPrevalence of Layoff and Work-Sharing Provisions ; Forestalling
and Minimizing Layoffs. Pt. IIUnion Participation in Layoff
Procedures ; Advance Notice of Layoffs. Pt. I l l Seniority and
Bumping Practices. Pt. IVRecall Procedures ; Work-Sharing. 1956Dec.
1385-1393; 1957Jan. 1-7, Feb. 177-185, Mar. 329-335.
Leave payments (see also Employee-benefit plans Sick leave, this
section) :
Union Contract Provisions for Paid Jury Leave. 1955May
545-547.
Union Contract Provisions for Paid Leave on Death in Family.
1955Mar. 322-325.
Maintenance of membership. See Union security, this section.
Meatpacking. Collective Bargaining in the Meat-Packing Industry.
1951Aug. 156-159.
Metal trades. Bargaining in the Metal Trades in the Northwest.
1957July 797-802.
Military service:Employers Military-Leave Policies: Effect on
Benefit
Plans, Fall 1950. 1951 Apr. 411-413. Military-Service Payments
in Union Agreements,
1953. 195kJuly 771-776.Nightwork. See Premium pay and Shift
differentials,
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5Collective bargaining agreements Continued Older workers:
Employment and Age in Union Contracts. 1956 Dec. 1403-1409.
Insurance and Pension Plans. 1957Jan. 29-36. Overtime pay. See
Hours of work, Premium pay, and
Shift differentials, this section.Pensions. See under
Employee-benefit plans, this
section.Premium pay (see also Shift differentials, this section)
:
Premium Pay: An Analysis of Industrial Practices.1951 Aug.
148-151.
Premium Pay for Weekend Work, 1952. 1958 Sept. 933-939.
Premium Pay for Weekend Work in Major Contracts [1958]. 1959Apr.
379-388.
Recall. See Layoffs, this section.Reemployment. See Layoffs and
Military service, this
section.Reporting and Call-Back Pay in Collective Bargaining
Agreements. 1954Dec. 1334-1340.Rest periods:
Paid Rest-Period Provisions in Union Agreements,1952- 53.
1954May 531-535.
Paid Rest Periods in Major Union Contracts, 1959. I960. Sept.
958-963.
Retirement. See Employee-benefit plans, this section. Safety
equipment. Contract Allowances for Safety
Equipment and Work Clothing, 1959. 1960Nov. 1189-1192.
Seniority:Collectively Bargained Length-of-Service Benefits.
1951Aug. 152-155.Contract Clauses on Seniority as a Factor in
Layoffs.
1955July 766-771.The Practice of Seniority in Southern Pulp
Mills.
1955July 757-765.Severance pay (see also Layoffs, this section).
Dis
missal Pay Provisions in Major Bargaining Agreements. 1957June
707-712.
Shift differentials (see also Premium pay, this section) : Shift
Operations and Differentials in Union Con
tracts, 1952. 1952Nov. 495-498.Shift Provisions in Major Union
Contracts, 1958.
1959Mar. 271-275.Sick leave. See under Employee-benefit plans,
this
section.Steel:
The Basie Steel Companies and Steelworkers Agreement. 1960Feb.
161-163.
The Kaiser-Steelworkers Agreement. 1959Dec.1345-1346.
Union business. Company Pay for Time Off on Union Business.
1959Oct. 1075-1080.
Union security:Checkoff Provisions in Major Union Contracts,
1958-59. 1960Jan. 26-31.Union Status Under Collective
Agreements, 1950-51.
1951Nov. 552-556.Union-Status Provisions in Collective
Agreements,
1952. 1958Apr. 383-387.Union Security Provisions in Agreements,
1954.
1955June 649-658.Union Security Provisions in Major Union
Contracts,
1958-59. 1959Dec. 1348-1356.Vacations:
Paid Vacation Provisions in Collective Agreements, 1952.
1952Aug. 162-167.
Paid Vacations in Major Union Contracts, 1957.1958July
744-751.
Wage adjustments (see also Expirations or reopenings, this
section; Revision, 1953 under Prices, consumerConsumer Price Index;
Wages and hoursWage developments) :
Collective bargaining agreements Continued Wage
adjustments'Continued
Annual review:IVage Escalation [in 1955]Recent Developments.
1955Mar. 315-318.Deferred Wage Increases in 1957 and Wage
Escala
tor Clauses. 1957Jan. 50-52.Deferred Wage Increases in 1958 and
Wage Escala
tor Clauses. 1957Dec. 1464-1467.Deferred Increases [in 1959] and
Escalator Clauses.
1958Dec. 1362-1365.Deferred Wage Increases [in 1960] and
Escalator
Clauses. 1959Dec. 1324-1328.Deferred Wage Increases [in 1961]
and Escalator
Clauses. 1960Dec. 1268-1271.Escalator Wage Adjustments Based on
Price of
Product. 1951July 48-49.The Growth, Status, and Implications of
Wage
Escalation. 1958Feb. 126-129.Washup time. See Cleanup and
clothes-change time,
this section.Welfare plans. See Employee-benefit plans, this
section.Work clothing. See Safety equipment, this section.
Worksharing. See Layoffs, this section.Work Stoppage Provisions in
Union Agreements.
1952Mar. 272-275.Communications. See Absenteeism; and under
Wage
chronologies; Wages and hours.Conciliation. See Arbitration and
mediation.Congress of Industrial Organizations. See Labor organ
izations.Construction (see also Homebuilders; Housing; and
under
Employment) :Activity:
Construction in the 1958 Economy. 1959Jan. 1-7. The Continuing
Prosperity of the Construction In
dustry. 1954July 767-768.Collective bargaining. Trends in
Bargaining in the
Northwest Construction Industry. 1954Nov.1214-1219.
Controls. Liberalization of Controls in the Construction
Industry. 1952May 563.
Labor requirements:Construction Labor on Public Housing in the
South.
1952Oct. 388-394.Labor Requirements for Building Air Force
Housing.
1952 Sept. 263-268.Labor Requirements for Constructing Military
Air
fields. 1953Feb. 130-135.Suburban building. Building in
Metropolitan Areas,
1954-56. 1957June 689-696.Consumer expenditures and income. See
Income and
expenditures, consumer.Consumer metal goods. See under
Employment. Consumer prices. See Prices, consumer.Consumers
cooperatives. See Cooperatives, consumers. Conventions, meetings,
etc. See International Labor Or
ganization ; under Labor organizations; and topic of convention,
etc.
Cooperatives, consumers, United States:Credit unions:
Operations of Credit Unions in 1950. 1951Nov. 561-563.
Operations of Credit Unions in 1951. 1958Feb. 155-158.
Housing. Cooperative Housing in the United States, Mid-1950.
1951 Sept. 258-264.
Operations and developments:Developments Among Consumers
Cooperatives in
1950. 1951May 545-549.Operations of Consumers Cooperatives in
1950.
1951Oct. 456-458.Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/ Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
-
6Cooperatives, consumers, United StatesContinued Operations and
developmentsContinued
Developments in Cooperatives in 1951. 1952Mar. 279-283.
Consumer Cooperatives, 1941 to 1951. 1953Aug. 862-865.
Consumer Cooperatives in an Expanding Economy.1957May
591-595.
Cooperatives, international:International Cooperative Congress,
Copenhagen, 1951.
1952Jan. 45-48.International Cooperative Congress, Stockholm,
1957.
1958Jan. 59-61.Cooperatives, producers, Soviet Union. Producers
Co
operatives in the Soviet Union. 1957Sept. 1064- 1068.
Copper mining. See under Wage chronologies.Cost of living. See
Budgets; Income and expenditures,
consumer; Prices, consumer.Council of Economic Advisers (see
Economic conditions
CEA and Presidents reports). BLS program. The Economic Analysts
Desire for Certain Program Expansion. 1955Jan. 48.
Credit unions. See Cooperatives, consumer.Cutlery, hand tools,
and general hardware. See under
Wages and hours.
DAIRY PRODUCTS. See Prices, consumerFood. Death benefits. See
Collective bargaining agreements
Employee-benefit plans.Defense mobilization and policies (see
also Labor organi
zationsConventions; Price controls; Wage controls) :
Collective bargaining (see also Labor and labor problems, this
section). Collective Bargaining in a Defense Economy. 1951Feb.
140-142.
Employment in defense industries. See Employment Aircraft,
Automobiles, Construction, Consumer metal goods, Electronics,
Ordnance, Shipbuilding and repairing.
Hours of Work in Key Industries, December 1950.1951 May
523-527.
Labor and labor problems (see also Manpower, this section) :
The American Labor Movement in Past Emergencies.1951Oct.
430-432.
A Bibliography on Labor in National Emergencies.1951 Oct.
414-419.
IRRA Discussion of Government-Labor Relations.1952 Feb.
145-150.
Labor During National Emergencies. 1951Oct. 383-419.
Labor-management disputes. Dispute Settlement and Wage
Stabilization in World War II. 1951Feb. 136-140.
Legislation. Defense Production Act. Amendments of 1951. 1951
Sept. 299-301. Amendments of 1952.1952 Aug. 191-192.
Manpower (see also Reports and recommendations, this section)
:
Civilian Manpower Programs for National Mobilization. 1954Aug.
866-869.
Exemptions From State Labor Law in New York Defense Industries.
1951Dec. 690-692.
Federal Policy on Retaining State Labor Standards.1952Jan.
36.
Government, Federal. Emergency Procedures for Civil Service
Personnel. 1951Jan. 53.
Measures to Place Defense Orders in Surplus Manpower Areas.
1952Apr. 426-427.
ODM Manpower Policy Statement of August 1951.1951Sept.
298-299.
Military service. See Collective bargaining agreementsMilitary
service.
Defense mobilization and policiesContinued Personnel
administration. See ManpowerAdminis
tration.Reports and recommendations:
Changes in Administration of Defense Mobilization Program.
1951June 694-696.
Changes in Price-Wage Policy and Administration, June 1951.
1951-Aug. 164-166.
Defense Economy Recommendations of President and CEA. 1951Mar.
278-281.
Defense Mobilization Action, December 1950-January 1951.
1951Mar. 281-282.
Defense Mobilization and Manpower Changes, August 1951. 1951Oct.
429-430.
Defense Mobilizer. First quarterly report. 1951 May 543-545.
Third through eighth quarterly reports. 1951Nov. 558-559 ; 1952Feb.
177, May 534, Aug. 186-187, Nov. 521-522; 1953Feb. 159- 160.
Economic stabilization. Resignation Report of the ESA
Administrator. 1952Jan. 55-56.
Midyear 1951 Economic Reports of the President, CEA, and ODM.
1951 Sept. 296-298.
Shift operations inMetalworking Plants, January 1951.
1951May
533-534.Metalworking Industries, 1951. 1952Dec. 615-619.
Wages. Trends in Wages in 1950. 1951June 638-641. Department of
Labor, United States (see also specific
bureaus) :An Introductory Note [to Departments Older Worker
Program]. 1956Dec. 1402.Recommendations in Secretary of Labors
1950 Report.
1951June 693-694.Department of Labor, territories. See
Legislation, ter
ritories.Depressed areas. See Agriculture; and under Labor
mobility; Unemployment.Disability benefits. See Collective
bargaining agree
mentsEmployee-benefit plans.Discrimination. See Collective
bargaining agreements
Older workers; and under Employment.Disease. See Occupational
disease.Dismissal pay. See Collective bargaining agreements
Severance pay.Displaced persons. See Immigration.Dresses. See
Wages and hoursApparel.Drugs, medicines, and cosmetics. See under
Wages and
hours.Drycleaning. See under Wages and hours.Dual loyalty (see
also Industrial relationsThe Case,
etc.) :Dual Allegiance at Swift & Co., Chicago. 1953Dec.
1276-1277.Dual Loyalty in Modern Society. 1953Dec. 1273-1274.
Impact of Unions in Small Plants. 1956July 787-792. A Methodology
in Studying Role Conflict. 1953Dec.
1278-1279.Mutual Emotional Acceptance by Union and Manage
ment. 1953Dec. 1274-1276.A Theoretical Examination of the
Concept of Dual
Loyalty. 1953Dec. 1279-1280.
EARNINGS. See Wages and hours.Economic conditions, United States
(see also Defense
mobilization and policies; Economic growth): Business Cycles and
the Labor Market. 1955Mar.
288-292.CEA and Presidents reports:
Annual Economic Reports of the President and CEA, Early 1952.
1952Mar. 287-289.
Defense Economy Recommendations of President and CEA. 1951Mar.
278-281.
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Reserve Bank of St. Louis
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7Economic conditions, United StatesContinued CEA and Presidents
reportsContinued
Economic Messages, December 1952-January 1953.1953Mar.
278-280.
The Economic Report of the President. 1959Mar. 280-283.
Labor and Economic Policies in the Presidents Message. 1953Apr.
392-393.
Midyear 1951 Economic Reports of the President, CEA, and ODM.
1951 Sept. 296-298.
The Nations Economic Prospects, 1955. 1955May 562-564.
Plans and Reports on Manpower, Labor Relations, and Welfare.
1954Mar. 267-271.
Construction. The Continuing Prosperity of the Construction
Industry. 1954July 767-768.
Indicators:Overtime Hours as an Economic Indicator. 1956
Sept. 1024-1028.Three BLS Series as Business Cycle Turn
Signals.
1959Sept. 973-976.Low-income groups. See under Income and
expendi
tures, consumer.New England. Development and Prospects of the
New
England Economy. 1951Oct. 458-460.Textiles:
Economic Problems and Wage Structure in Cotton Textiles.
1952Aug. 140-149.
New England Textiles and the Regions Economy.1957May
588-590.
The Textile Situation in New England. 1953Aug. 832-834.
Economic conditions, Puerto Rico. See Migration and migratory
workers, Puerto Rico.
Economic conditions, territories. See Labor force,
territories.
Economic conditions, foreign countries:Canada. The Labor Market
and Economic Activity in
Canada. 1954July 778-780.Great Britain. Wages, Prices, and
Economic Policy in
Great Britain, 1954-57. 1958Mar. 260-264.Israel. Recent
Developments in Labor Conditions in
Israel. 1954Oct. 1107-1112.Economic growth, United States (see
also Economic con
ditions) :Future Production and Employment in the United
States. 1952Oct. 401-403.National Output and Income, 1929-53.
1955Feb. 207-
208.Productivity and Economic Progress, 1900 to 1950.
1953Apr. 391-392.Prospects for the Nations Economic Growth in
1957.
1957May 595-598.Rise in National Product and Real Income,
1929-50.
1951Dec. 694-695.A Shorter Workweek as a Factor in Economic
Growth.
1956Feb. 157-160.Views of Business and Labor on Maintaining
National
Prosperity. 1953Oct. 1072-1075.West Coast. See under Labor
force.
Economic growth, territories. Hawaii: Economic Forces and Growth
Prospects. 1955Dec. 1409-1415.
Economic Report, Joint Congressional Committee (see also
Economic conditionsCEA and Presidents reports) :
An Inquiry Into the Effects of Automation. 1956Jan. 7-14.
A Program for Raising Substandard Levels of Living.1956Mar.
313-316.
Economic Report of the President. See Economic conditionsCEA and
Presidents reports.
Education, United States (see also Handicapped workers; Labor
organizationsEducational activities; Training) :
Attainment. See Labor forceEducational attainment.
Education, United States ContinuedDevelopments in University
Labor Education Programs.
1956July 793-795.Education Through White Collar Workshops.
1952
May 508-510.Industry Techniques for Employee Education. 1952
Apr. 418-420.Recent Trends in and Outlook for College
Enrollments.
1956Mar. 286-291.The Shortage of Creative Manpower. 1954May
507-510.Education, foreign countries:
Great Britain. Technical Training in the United Kingdom.
1959July 783.
Latin America. U.S. Firms as Employers in Latin America. 1960May
479-485.
Electrical equipment. See under Employment.Electric lamps. See
under Wages and hours.Electric utilities. See under Wage
chronologies; Wages
and hours.Electronic data processing. See under Automation
and
technological change.Electronics. See under Employment; Labor
mobility. Electroplating, plating, and polishing. See under
Wages
and hours.Employee behavior, United States. Employee
Attitudes
and Output. 1954June 641-648.Employee behavior, foreign
countries:
Great Britain. Absence and Overtime in Relation to Wage and
Number of Dependents. 1958Apr. 403-408.
Latin America. Problems in A Latin American Factory Society.
1954July 756-760.
Employee-benefit plans. See Health, welfare, and pension plans;
Unemployment benefit plans, supplemental ; Wage chronologies; Wages
and related benefits; and under Collective bargaining agreements;
and specific industries under Wages and hours.
Employment, United States (see also Labor force; Labor mobility;
Labor turnover; Manpower) :
A ircraft:Expansion of Employment in the Aircraft-Engine
Industry. 1952Mar. 284-287.Expansion of Employment in the
Aircraft Industry.
1951July 15-19.Growth of Aircraft and Parts Industry, 1939 to
1954.
1954 Dec. 1320-1326.New England: The Growth of the Aircraft
Industry.
1.957Mar. 316-320.Apprentices. See TrainingEmployment, etc.
Automobiles. The Effects of Mobilization on Automo
bile Employment. 1952Jan. 1-6.BLS statistics:
Accuracy of BLS Current Estimates of Employment.1955 Dec.
1473-1477.
The BLS Employment Series and Manufacturing Reporting Practices.
1957Nov. 1367-1371.
Employment in Social Welfare and Related Organizations. 1954Oct.
1126-1129.
Machine Methods in Employment Statistics. 1955 May 567-569.
Measurement of Employment in Water Transportation Industry.
1954Oct. 1121-1126.
Measurement of Industrial Employment. 1953Sept. 968-973.
Period of Reference for BLS Employment Statistics. 1.95//Aug.
890-891.
Chemicals, industrial. Employment Trends in the Industrial
Chemicals Industry. 1952May 522-531.
Child-welfare workers. Status of Child-Welfare Workers. 1951Aug.
176.
Construction. Manpower Effects of the Defense Construction
Program. 1952Mar. 267-270.
Consumer metal goods. Trends in Consumer Metal- Goods
Industries, 1939-50. 1951Mar. 263-269.
Digitized for FRASER http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/ Federal
Reserve Bank of St. Louis
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8Employment, United StatesContinued Defense. See in this
section: Aircraft; Automobiles;
Construction ; Consumer metal goods ; Electronics; Ordnance;
Shipbuilding and repairing.
Depressed area. Employment Effects of a Plant Shutdown in a
Depressed Area. 1957 Sept. 1047-1052.
Discrimination:Conference on Equal Job Opportunity. 1956Jan.
31-33.International Harvesters Nondiscrimination Policy.
195kJan. 16-23.Minority Groups Conference on Equal
Employment
Opportunities. 1955Sept. 1017-1019.Minority Worker Hiring and
Referral in San Fran
cisco. 1958Oct. 1131-1136.Negroes in Apprenticeship, New York
State. 1960
Sept. 952-957.Two State Reports on Job Discrimination. 1958
Oct. 1125-1130.Electrical equipment. Employment Outlook in
the
Electrical Equipment Industry. 1952Nov. 507- 510.
Electronics:Electronics Employment and Labor Force. 1953
Oct. 1049-1054.Expansion in Electronics Employment. 1952Feb.
151-155.Engineers. Engineering Personnel Employed in Metal
working Industries. 195kMay 526-530.Full. American Productivity
and Full Employment.
1952 Feb. 125-129.Government, Federal:
Government Employment Trends, 1929 to 1956.1957July 811-815.
The Governments Industrial Employees: IExtent of Employment,
Status, Organization. 195k Jan. 1-6.
The Jobs of Federal White-Collar Workers. 1952 Nov. 489-494.
Government, State and local:Government Employment Trends, 1929
to 1956.
1957July 811-815.State and Local Governments, 1909 to 1948.
1951
July 20-25.Maritime industries. Earnings and Employment of
American Seamen in 1957. 1959Jan. 36-40. Metalworking.
Metalworking Employment in Small
and Large Firms. 195kApr. 412-418.Mining. Manpower Trends in the
Mining Industries.
1951Aug. 133-140.Negroes {see also Discrimination, this section)
:
Employment and Income of Negro Workers1940-52.1953June
596-601.
Negro Employment in Three Companies in the New Orleans Area.
1955 Sept. 1020-1023.
New England (see also Aircraft, this section). Historical
Patterns and Recent Trends in Employment.1957Mar. 281-287.
Nonagricultural:Changing Geography of American Industry.
195k
July 739-743.Changing Patterns of Industrial Employment,
1919-
55. 1956M&r. 279-285.Review of Trends in Employment Since
Korea.
195kOct. 1083-1089.A Review of Employment Trends in 1954 and
1955.
1955Oct. 1105-1111.Nonproduction Workers in Factories, 1919-56.
1957
Apr. 435-419.Ordnance. Expansion in Ordnance Employment,
1950-
52. 1952Aug. 159-162.Part-time (see also Students d Women, this
section).
Low Incomes and Underemployment in AgricultureProposed Remedies.
1952mly 48-50.
Employment, United StatesContinued Railroads. See under
Automation and technological
change.Shipbuilding and repairing:
Defense Expansion in Shipyard Employment. 1951 Sept.
283-287.
Employment Trend in Ship Construction and Repairing. 1952July
7-11.
Outlook for Employment in the Shipbuilding Industry. 1953 Sept.
940-943.
Size of firm. See Metalworking, this section.Statistics. The
Role of Employment Data in Decision-
Making. 1955Mar. 293-296.Steel. Employment Outlook in the Iron
and Steel In
dustry. 1951 Oct. 451-454.Students:
The Employment of Students, October 1959. 1960 July 705-709.
Youth Employment and School Enrollment, 1953-55.1956 Sept.
1062-1063.
Watches and cloeks. Employment Trends in the Watch and Clock
Industry. 1953June 618-620.
West Coast (see also under Labor force). Shifts in Californias
Industrial and Employment Composition. 1959May 509-517.
White-collar. White-Collar Employment and Income.1956 Apr.
401-409.
Women:Changes in Womens Occupations, 1940 to 1950.
195kNov. 1205-1209.Earnings and Employment of Women Factory
Work
ers, April 1954. 1955Oct. 1126-1132. Employment and
Characteristics of Women Engi
neers. 1956May 551-554.Employment of college women who graduated
in
June1955. IPodSept. 1057-1061.1956. 1958July 752-756.1957.
1959June 663-666.
Factory Employment of Women, 1950 to 1954. 195k Nov.
1210-1213.
Part-Time Jobs for W'omen in Nonmanufacturing Industries.
1952Jan. 40-41.
Workers place of work and residence (see also Depressed areas,
this section). Employment and Residence in Major Metropolitan
Areas. 1957 Aug. 932-937.
Employment, territories. Alaska: The U.S. Government As an
Employer. 1955Dec. 1383-1387.
Employment, foreign countries (see also Foreign countries for
Labor force and Older workers). Western Europe. Employment and
Unemployment in Countries of Western Europe. 195k Sept.
983-987.
Employment Act of 1946 :American Productivity and Full
Employment. 1952
Feb. 125-129.Ideal and Working Concepts of the Employment
Act.
1957 Feb. 161-164.Labors Contribution Under the Employment A
ct
1957Feb. 164-165.Employment Service, United States. Employment
Serv
ice Program of Worker Utilization. 1952May 499- 504.
Engineers (see also EmploymentWomen; Manpower Chemists and
chemical engineers and Research and development; and under
Employment). The Shortage of Creative Manpower. 195kMay
507-510.
Equal job opportunity. See Collective bargaining agreementsOlder
workers; EmploymentDiscrimination and Negroes.
Equal pay for equal work (see also under Collective bargaining
agreements). National Conference on Equal Pay for Equal Work.
1952May 559-560.
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Reserve Bank of St. Louis
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9Escalator adjustments. See Collective bargaining
agreementsExpirations or reopenings and Wage adjustments ; Labor
costs; Wage-price policy, foreign countries; Wages and hoursWage
escalation.
European Coal and Steel Community. See European economic
integration.
European economic integration:Assistance to Labor Surplus Areas
in Europe. 1960
June 569-576.A Common Labor Market for Four Nordic
Countries.
1954Aug. 886.European Coal-Steel Community and West German
Wage-Price Issues. 1956Aug. 937.Free Labor and the European
Economic Community.
1958Aug. 877-879.Free Movement of Labor in the Benelux
Countries.
1957Apr. 473.An Integrated Labor Market for West Europe.
1954
Feb. 178-179.Labor Activities of the European Coal and Steel
Com
munity. 1955Apr. 448-449.Labor organizations:
Organization of Common-Market Trade Unions.1958Apr. 411.
Trade Union Views on European Economic Integration. 1960Apr.
365-369.
Labor Shortages in Belgian Mines. 1957Jan. 71-72.Wage-Price
Developments in the European Coal and
Steel Community. 1955Aug. 917.Expenditures, consumers. See
Income and expenditures,
consumer.
FAIR LABOR STANDARDS ACT:Effects of statutory wage minimums. See
Wages and
hoursMinimum wage.A Minimum Wage for Farm Workers. 1960July
677-
685.Puerto Rico. See Wages and hours, Puerto Rico.Two Decades of
the Fair Labor Standards Act. 1958
Oct. 1097-1106.Farm labor. See Agriculture.Federal Employees
Compensation Act. Workmens Com
pensation in the United States: IIIFederal Legislation. 1953June
602-608.
Fertilizers. See under Wages and hours.Finances, consumer. See
Income and expenditures, con
sumer.Firemen. See under Wages and hours.Fishermen, Boston. See
under Wages and hours.Flour and cereal preparations. See under
Wages and
hours.Food. See under Prices, consumer.Food services in plants.
In-Plant Feeding Practices in
Factories. 1959Aug. 894-898.Footwear. See under Collective
bargaining; Prices, con
sumer ; Productivity; Wage chronologies; Wages and hours.
Foreign competition. See Collective bargainingForeign trade.
Forgings, iron and steel. See under Wages and hours.Foundries.
See Occupational disease; and under Pro
ductivity ; Wages and hours.Furniture. See under Wages and
hours.
GAS UTILITIES. See Wage chronologiesElectric utilities ; and
under Wages and hours.
Government, Federal. See Automation and technological
changeElectronic data processing; Federal Employees Compensation A
ct; Wage chronologies Federal classified employees; and under
Defense mobilization and policiesManpower; Employment;
Unemployment; Wage determination; Wages and hours.
Government, State and local. See Legislation, State Public
employees ; and under Employment.
Grain milling. See under Wages and hours.Grievances. See under
Arbitration and mediation; Col
lective bargaining agreements.Guaranteed employment and wage
plans. See Collective
bargaining agreementsGuaranteed Employment, etc.; Unemployment
benefit plans, supplemental.
HANDICAPPED WORKERS:Development of Work Opportunity for the
Handicapped.
1952June 640-642.The Ford Plan for Employing the Handicapped.
1953
Dec. 1299-1301.Industrys Problems in Placing Older
Handicapped
Workers. 1953July 756-757.Jobs for the Disabled: The Task Ahead.
1953July
754-755.Progress and Needs in Vocational Rehabilitation.
1955 Sept. 1019-1020.Rehabilitation of Workers with Hand
Injuries, Puerto
Rico. 1951Aug. 182-183.Safety in Employment of Physically
Handicapped Per
sons. 1954Oct. 1117-1118.Vocational Rehabilitation by
Federal-State Agencies,
1952Aug. 188.Hawaii (see also specific subjects). Bibliography
on La
bor Conditions, Labor Problems, Labor Economics. 1955Dec.
1440,1444-1445.
Health (see also Occupational health). The HealthNeeds of the
United States. 1953Mar. 275-278.
Health, welfare, and pension plans (see also Employee- benefit
plans, Older workers, and Military service under Collective
bargaining agreements; Wage chronologies; and specific industries
under Wages and hours) :
Administration and operation (see also Legislation,
FederalWelfare and pension plans; Labor-Management Reporting and
Disclosure Act) :
Codes of Ethical Practices of the Labor Movement.1957Mar.
350-353.
Findings From the Second Report of the McClellan Committee. 1959
Sept. 983-991.
The Legislative Recommendations of the McClellan Committee.
195SMay 518-520.
Senate Committee Report on Voluntary Medical-Care Insurance.
1951Nov. 578-581.
Senate Investigation of Welfare and Pension Plans.1956July
812-815.
Senate Report on Private Employee Welfare Plans. 1955Apr.
424-427.
Costs of medical care. See Prices, consumerMedical care.
Coverage (see also New York, this section). Health, Insurance,
and Pension Plans in 17 Labor Markets.1954Nov. 1228-1232.
GEs Experience with Comprehensive Health Insurance.1958June
621-625.
Investment of funds. Interests at Stake in the Investment of
Pension Funds. 1959July 751-756.
Labors Interests in Medical Care Plans. 1960Feb. 145-147.
A Labor View of Health Insurance. 1958June 626- 630.
Managements Interests in Medical Care Plans. 1960 Feb.
147-149.
Medical-Care Insurance for Industrial Workers. 1951 Sept.
251-257.
Methods of Evaluating a Group Insurance Program.1957Oct.
1188-1190.
Negotiation and Administration of Health and Welfare Programs.
Scope and Operation. Preparation for Bargaining. 1957May
576-581.
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Reserve Bank of St. Louis
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10
Health, welfare, and pension plansContinued Continued
New York:Health and Welfare Plans in New York State, June
1954. 1955Aug. 905-907.Health Benefit Coverage of the New York
Labor
Force. 1960July 718-722.Trends and Current Issues in Social
Insurance. 1957
Feb. 166-169.West Coast. The Development of Health Insurance
Plans. 1959May 572-578.Heating apparatus. See under Wages and
hours.Hides and skins. See under Prices, wholesale.Holidays, United
States. See Wage chronologies; Wages
and related benefits; under Collective bargaining agreements;
and specific industries under Wages and hours.
Holidays, foreign countries. See Legislation, foreign countries
Soviet Union; Wages and related benefits, foreign countries.
Homebuilders. Structure of the Residential Building Industry,
1949. 1951Oct. 454-456.
Hosiery. See under Wages and hours.Hospitals. See Work
injuriesFrequency and severity
rates.Hotel service workers. See under Wages and hours. Hours of
work, United States (see also Collective bar
gaining agreementsPremium pay and Shift differentials; Shift
operations; Wages and hours) :
Average weekly:Hours and Earnings in Nonagricultural
Industries.
1954Apr. 427-431.Hours of Work in Key Industries, December
1950.
1951May 523-527.Length of Workweek in Manufacturing, May
1953-
May 1954. 1954Dec. 1311-1314.Three BLS Series as Business Cycle
Turn Signals.
1959 Sept. 973-976.Man-Hour Trends in Industrial and
Construction Ac
tivity. 1954Aug. 859-861.Overtime Hours as an Economic
Indicator. 1956
Sept. 1024-1028.Payroll hours. Composition of Payroll Hours in
Man
ufacturing, 1958. 1960July 686-692.Scheduled workweek:
Hours of Work and Overtime Provisions in Union Contracts.
1958Feb. 133-141.
Scheduled Workweeks and Shift Differentials in 17 Labor Markets.
1956Nov. 1295-1299.
Workweeks, Overtime, and Shift Pay in 17 Labor Markets, 1957-58.
1958Dec. 1374-1380.
Shorter workweek:Economic Aspects of Shorter Hours of Work.
1956
Nov. 1274-1275.History of Union Efforts to Reduce Working
Hours.
1956Nov. 1271-1273.Proposals for Reducing the Workweek.
1956Nov.
1266-1267.Recent Progress Toward Reducing Hours of Work.
1956Nov. 1263-1265.A Shorter Workweek as a Factor in
Economic
Growth. 1956Feb. 157-160.Workers Attitudes Toward Shorter Hours.
1956
Nov. 1268-1270.The Workweek in American Industry, 1850-1956.
1958Jan. 23-29.Hours of work, foreign countries (see also
Legislation,
foreign countries Soviet Union). Belgium. The Shorter Workweek
in Belgium. 1957Jan. 73.
Housing, United States (see also Construction; Cooperatives,
Homebuilders; and under Prices, consumer Consumer Price Index)
:
Additions and alterations. Revised Estimates of Residential
Additions and Alterations, 1945-56. 1957 Aug. 973-975.
Housing, United StatesContinued BLS statistics:
Revised BLS Seasonal Index of Private Nonfarm Housing Starts.
1956Aug. 938-940.
Revision of BLS Housing Statistics. 1954Nov. 1239-1243.
Characteristics (see also Expenditures, this section) :
Characteristics of New 1-Family Houses, 1954-56.
1957 May 572-575.Housing Characteristics in 34 Large Cities.
1951
Nov. 569-570.Housing in Britain and America. I.
Characteristics
and Ownership. 1960May 449-459.Housing Surveys in 75 Cities,
1950 and 1952. 1954
July 744-750.New Housing Characteristics in 1955 and Earlier
Years. 1956July 796-804.New Rental Housing Characteristics in
Nine Areas.
1951Dec. 657-663.Regional Differences in Characteristics of
New
Houses. 1952Feb. 163-167.Contractors Use of Home-Building
Permits Issued.
1952Jan. 21-22.Demand:
Housing and Population in Metropolitan Areas. 1951Jan.
22-23.
Housing Demand in the United States, 1957-65.1958 Feb.
142-145.
Expenditures:Evolution in the Workers Housing Since 1900.
1958Aug. 854-861.Housing in Britain and America. II. Volume
and
Expenditures. 1960June 561-568.Financing:
Federal Loan Insurance and Housing Needs. 1959 Apr. 40o407.
Financing of New Sales Housing in Metropolitan Areas. 1952Apr.
390-394.
New Home Financing in Washington Area, 1949-51.1951 May
534-537.
New HousingTrends in 1949-51: Purchasers Incomes and New-Home
Financing. Family Income and New Rental Housing. Features and Costs
of New 1-Family Houses. 1951July 1-14.
Relaxation of Mortgage Credit Controls, 1952.1952 July 52.
Supply and Use of Mortgage Funds, 1920-29 and 1947-56. 1957Oct.
1211-1215.
Legislation. The Housing Act of 1954. 1954 Sept.990-995.
Market forces. Current Forces in the Homebuilding Market.
1955Oct. 1112-1114.
Owners v. renters expenses. Monthly Cost of Owning and Renting
New Housing, 1949-50. 1954Aug. 851-858, Sept. 977-982.
Rehabilitation. Financial Hardship Cases Handled by the
Fight-Blight Fund. 1955Aug. 882-888, Sept 1001-1007.
Savannah River project. Labor and the Savannah River AEC
Project. Pt. I l lHousing and Changes in Population. 1952Aug.
150-158.
Suburbanization. Building in Metropolitan Areas,1954-56.
1957June 689-696.
Units started, by State. New BLS Series on Housing Starts in
Selected States, 1954-56. 1957Aug.964-965.
Housing, foreign countries. Great Britain. Housing in Britain
and America. I. Characteristics and Ownership. II. Volume and
Expenditures. 1960May 449- 459, June 561-568.
IMMIGRATION:Integration of Displaced Persons Into U.S.
Economic
Life. 1952Dec. 611-614.Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/ Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
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ImmigrationContinuedRecommendations on Immigration Policy.
1958Jan.
45-47.Report of President's Commission on Immigration and
Naturalization. 1953June 628-629.Improper Activities in the
Labor or Management Field,
Senate Select Committee on. See Health, welfare, and pension
plansAdministration and operation; Labor-Management Reporting and
Disclosure Act.
Incentive pay. See under Wages and hours.Income and
expenditures, consumer, United States :
Age. Influence of Age on Saving and Spending Patterns, 1955Nov.
1240-1244.
Families, city:BLS statistics, 1950:
Consumer Expenditure Study, 1950: Field Methods and Purposes.
1951Jan. 56-59.
Selection of Cities for Consumer Expenditures Survey, 1950.
1951Apr. 430-436.
Survey of Consumer Expenditures in 1950. 1952 Aug. 125-133.
Survey of Consumer Expenditures in 1950: Interpretation and Use
of the Results. 1952 Oct. 425-428.
BLS statistics, 1959. Consumer Expenditure Surveys and Price
Indexes. 1959 Sept. 967-970.
Boston. Profiles of Worker Family Living in Boston, 1875-1950.
1957Mar. 271-280.
Estimating Equivalent Incomes or Budget Costs by Family Type.
1960Nov. 1197-1200.
Housing. Evolution in the Workers Housing Since 1900. 1958Aug.
854-861.
Instalment credit. Use of Instalment Credit by City- Worker
Families in 1918. 1957June 712-716.
Memphis. Family Spending in Memphis, 1949.1951 June 655-661.
Reduced income. Income Reverses and Family Expenditures.
1956Mar. 298-299.
Religious and charitable giving. City Families as Givers
[primarily 1950]. 1959Dec. 1303-1311.
Standards and Levels of Living of City-Worker Families. 1956
Sept. 1015-1023.
Family Income Distribution in the United States.1955June
671-672.
Federal Reserve System surveys:1951:
Consumer Finances Survey, Preliminary Findings.1951 June
678-680.
Survey of Consumer Debt and Nonliquid Assets.1952 Apr.
420-422.
1952. Consumer Spending and Saving Plans Survey.1952 June
672-673.
1953. Consumer Finances Survey. 1953July 729. 1954:
Consumer Finances Survey. 1954June 660-661. Financial Position
of American Consumers. 1954
Oct. 1119-1120.Influence of Age on Saving and Spending
Patterns.
1955 Nov. 1240-1244.The Instability of Consumer Spending.
1952Aug.
188-191.Low income groups (see also Taxation) :
Families, city. See Families, city Standards, etc., this
section.
Low Incomes and Underemployment in Agriculture Proposed
Remedies. 1952July 48-50.
A Program for Raising Substandard Levels of Living.1956 Mar.
313-316.
Single persons. Single Consumers' Spending Patterns in Three
Periods. 1959Feb. 142-150.
Income and expenditures, consumer, Panama City. Family Income
and Expenditures in Panama City, 1952.1955Feb. 204-207.
642729 i6,2c
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Industrial relations, United StatesContinuedPlant relocation.
Advance Planning for Plant Reloca
tion. 1958Apr. 376.Railroad workers. Labor-Management Relations
Under
the Railway Labor Act, 1934-57. 1958Aug. 879- 881.
Review of, annual:1950. 1951Feb. 127-135.1951. 1952Feb.
130-139.1952. 1953Feb. 117-125.1953. 195kFeb. 121-127.1954.
1955Feb. 175-182.1955. 1956Feb. 150-155.1956. 1951Feb.
170-176.1957. 1958Jan. 6-13.1958. 1959Jan. 14-21.1959. 1960Jan.
10-17.
Review of, monthly. See Chronology of Recent Labor Events;
Developments in Industrial Relations; Labor Month in Review, each
issue.
Size of plant. The Effect of Plant Size on Industrial Relations
Practices. 1955May 555-556.
Small plants. Impact of Unions in Small Plants.1956July
787-792.
University Research in Industrial Relations. 1953 Feb.
136-138.
West Coast:Association Bargaining. 1959May 539-542.The Lumber
Industry. 1959May 558-563.Major Trends in Labor Relations. 1959May
536-
538.The Maritime Industry. 1959May 552-557.The Trucking
Industry. 1959May 547-551.The Use of Arbitration. 1959May
543-546.
Industrial relations, Puerto Rico. See Labor movement,Puerto
Rico.
Industrial relations, territories:Alaska: The Character of
Industrial Relations. 1955
Dec. 1401-1406.Hawaii: Labor Relations: Pattern and Outlook.
1955
Dec. 1431-1439.Industrial relations, foreign countries (see also
Co-deter
mination; and Foreign countries for Collective bargaining and
Labor-management disputes) :
Australia. See France, this section.Austria. The Wage-Price
Agreements in Postwar
Austria. 195kJune 629-634.Canada. Changes Affecting Labor in
Canada During
1951. 1952May 531-533.France:
A New French Approach in Labor-Management Relations. 1956May
555-556.
The Role of Unions in French and Australian Industries. 1953June
589-592.
Great Britain:Development of British Industrial Relations.
1951
Jan. 27-29.Employers and Industrial Relations in Britain and
America. 1956Nov. 1288-1291.Labor Relations in British
Metalworking. 1955
Apr. 403-409.Greece. Recent Developments in Greek Labor
Policy.
1955Dec. 1471-1472.India. In-Plant Role of Unions in Labor
Relations in
India. 1956Mar. 304-308.Latin America. U.S. Firms as Employers
in Latin
America. 1960May 479-485.Netherlands. Factors in Labor Peace in
the Nether
lands. 1958Apr. 412-413.Philippines. Effects of the Philippine
Industrial Peace
Act. 195kMay 551.Scandinavia. Labor-Management Relations in
Scandi
navia. 1951May 528-532.Soviet Union Policy Shift in Training of
Industrial
Labor. 1953June 616-618.
Industrial relations, foreign countriesContinued Sweden:
Centralization of Bargaining in Sweden Since 1939.1958Nov.
1230-1235.
Consultation and Negotiation in Swedish Factories.1960Oct.
1039-1044.
Industrial research. See Manpower.Inflation:
Conclusions on Inflation by the American Assembly. 1952July
52-53.
The Instability of Consumer Spending. 1952Aug. 188-191.
Insurance carriers. See under Automation and technological
change; Wages and hours.
International Labor Organization:Chamber of Commerce Industrial
Relations Session,
1953: An American Employers Appraisal of ILO. 195kJan.
26-27.
Coal mining. Fourth Session of the ILO Coal Mines Committee.
1951 Sept. 306-308.
Proceedings of conferences:34th. 1951Aug. 159-163.35th.
1952Sept. 279-281.38th. 1955Aug. 894-899.39th. 1956 Sept.
1047-1051.42d. 1958Sept. 988-990.43d. 1959 Sept. 977-982.
Recollections on the Founding of the ILO. 1959June 631-636.
Seamen and the International Labor Organization.1958Sept.
974-981.
United States Participation in the International Labor
Organization. 1957Mar. 342-346.
JOB CHOICE. See Labor mobility.Job evaluation. See under Wage
determination.
KNITTED OUTERWEAR, PHILADELPHIA. See Wages and hoursApparel.
LABOR AND INDUSTRIAL CONDITIONS, UNITED STATES. West Coast
Labor: Its Past and Its Prospects. 1959May 489-491.
Labor and industrial conditions, foreign countries: American
Activities in the International Labor Field.
1952Apr. 422-425.China:
The Control of Industrial Labor in Communist China. 1953Aug.
821-825.
Developments in Working Conditions in Communist China Since
1952. 1955Apr. 449.
Latin America. Manpower Problems and Prospects in Latin America.
1960 Sept. 909-916.
Soviet Union. See under Legislation, foreign countries. Labor
chronology:
Important Events in American Labor History. 195k Apr.
403-411.
Monthly. See Chronology of Recent Labor Events, each issue.
Labor costs, United States. BLS Earnings Series as Applied to
Price Escalation. 1952July 57-59.
Labor costs, foreign countries. Union Views on Fair Labor
Standards in Foreign Trade. 1960Oct. 1025- 1030.
Labor courts, foreign countries. A New Labor Court Law for
Western Germany. 195kMay 548.
Labor force, United States (see also Employment; Labor mobility;
Labor turnover; Manpower; Unemployment) :
Accessions. New Hires as a Source of Factory Workers, 1950-54.
1955June 660-670.
Agriculture. Effects of Chemistry and Technology on the
Agricultural Labor Force. 1952June 676-677.
Digitized for FRASER http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/ Federal
Reserve Bank of St. Louis
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13
Labor Force, United StatesContinued BLS statistics. New Seasonal
Adjustment Factors for
Labor Force Components. 1960Aug. 822-827. Educational
attainment:
Educational Attainment of Workers, 1959. 1960Feb. 113-122.
Education and Work of Young People in a Labor Surplus Area.
1957Dec. 1457-1463.
Forced labor. See under Labor force, foreign countries. High
school graduates. Employment of June 1959
High School Graduates, October 1959. 1960May 500-506.
Immigrants. See Immigration.Labor Force and Employment in 1959.
1960May
491-500.Marital and family characteristics:
Family Characteristics of Workers, 1959. 1960Aug. 828-836.
Marital Status of Workers, 1959. 1960Mar. 257- 261.
Multiple jobholders:Multiple Jobholding in the United States
[July
1958]. 1959July 769-771.Multiple Jobholders in December 1959.
1960Oct.
1045-1051.Part-time workers. Growth and Characteristics of
the
Part-Time Work Force. 1960Nov. 1166-1175. Problems. Current and
Prospective Labor Force Prob
lems. 1959Jan. 22-25.Projections:
AFL-CIO Meeting on Industrial and Labor Force Changes by 1965.
1958Mar. 287-290.
Labor Force Projections to 1975. 1957Dec. 1443- 1450.
Secondary labor force. Manpower Measures and the Secondary Labor
Force. 1958July 731-736.
Skilled workers. Skilled Labor Force in the United States, 1950.
1954Aug. 874-876.
Social workers. Personnel and Agencies Serving Blind People,
1955. 1957July 821-828.
Students. Teen-Age Student Workers in an Ohio County, 1940-49.
1954July 776-778.
Technicians in the Labor Force of Russia and America.1958Jan.
1-5.
West Coast:Economic Growth Patterns in Washington and
Oregon. 1959May 502-508.Farm Labor: Supply, Policies, and
Practices. 1959
May 518-523.Inmigration and Its Effect on Labor Force Char
acteristics. 1959May 492-501.Women workers (see also Secondary
labor force, this
section) :Expanding Occupational Opportunities for Women.
1958Apr. 381-383.Occupations and Salaries of Women Federal
Em
ployees. 1957Aug. 955-959.Trends in the Participation of Women
in the Work
ing Force. 1956May 559-565. Comments on the Analysis of Working
Force Trends for Women: IBasic Assumptions. IIConclusions.1956 May
568-567.
Women WorkersEmployment Trends, 1900 to 1950. 1951Jan. 52.
Work experience:Education and Work of Young People in a
Labor
Surplus Area. 1957Dec. 1457-1463.Employment Patterns of Insured
Workers in New
York Industries. 1954Sept. 996-997.Part-Year and Full-Year
Workers in the Labor Force.
1957 Aug. 960-964.Work Experience of the Population in 1959.
1960
Dec. 1272-1283.
Labor force, United StatesContinued Working life :
Changes in Working Life of Men, 1900 to 2000. 1955Mar.
297-300.
Tables of Working Life for Women, 1950. 1956June 654-659, Aug.
901-907, Oct. 1152-1158.
Labor force, Puerto Rico. See Migration and migratory workers,
Puerto Rico.
Labor force, territories (see also Employment, territories)
:
Alaska: The Economy and the Labor Force. 1955 Dec.
1375-1382.
Hawaii: Characteristics of the Labor Force. 1955 Dec.
1416-1421.
Labor force, foreign countries (see also Foreign countries for
Employment; Older workers; Unemployment) :
Belgium. Labor Shortages in Belgian Mines. 1957 Jan. 71-72.
Benelux countries. Free Movement of Labor in the Benelux
Countries. 1957Apr. 473.
Forced labor. The Extent of Forced Labor in the World. 1953
Sept. 944-951.
Germany. Population and Labor Market in the Federal Republic of
Germany. 1957 Sept. 1097.
Israel. Manpower for Agriculture in Israel. 1954 May 549.
Japan. Length of Work Life of Japanese Men, 1930 and 1955.
1958Dec. 1366-1368.
Nordic countries. A Common Labor Market for Four Nordic
Countries. 1954Aug. 886.
Soviet Union:The Soviet Labor Force: Implications of New
Data.
1958 Dec. 1393-1398.Technicians in the Labor Force of Russia and
Amer
ica. 1958Jan. 1-5.Women Workers in the Soviet Union. 1955
Sept.
1008-1010.Western Europe. An Integrated Labor Market for
West Europe. 1954Feb. 178-179. Labor-management disputes, United
States (see also
Arbitration and mediation; National Labor Relations A ct;
National Labor Relations Board; Railway Labor Act) :
Federal intervention:Dispute Settlement and Wage Stabilization
in World
War II. 1951Feb. 136-140.Federal Seizures in Labor-Management
Disputes.
1917-52. 1953June 611-616.National emergencies. A Long-Range
Plan for Pre
venting Bargaining Crises. 1959Dec. 1347.The Role of Law in
Labor Disputes. 1954Oct. 1113-
1117.Steel:
Background Statistics Bearing on the Steel Dispute.1959 Oct.
1089-1107.
Remarks Upon Conclusion of Steel Board Testimony.1959 Dec.
1330-1332.
The Steel Boards Final Report on the 1959 Dispute.1960 Mar.
262-269.
The Steel Boards Report to the President. 1959 Dec.
1333-1341.
The Supreme Courts Ruling in the Injunction Appeal. 1959Dec.
1342-1344.
Strike benefit pact. Mutual Strike Aid in the Airlines.1960June
589-591.
Strikes:Annual review of work stoppages in
1950. 1951May 514-522.1951. 1952May 511-519.1952. 1953May
504-512.1953. 1954May 501-506.1954. 1955May 538-545.1955. 1956May
521-526.1956. 1957May 565-571.
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Reserve Bank of St. Louis
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Labor-management disputes, United StatesContinued S
trikesContinued
Annual review of work stoppages inContinued1957. 1958May
485-491.1958. 1959June 637-641.1959. 1960June 610-614.
International comparisons. Changing Patterns of Industrial
Conflict. 1960Mar. 229-237.
The Relationship of Size of Firm and Strike Activity.1957 Nov.
1330-1334.
State Ratios of Strike Idleness to Total Time Worked, 1952-54.
1955July 796.
Teachers. Collective Bargaining and Work Stoppages Involving
Teachers. 1953May 475-479.
Textiles. History of Work Stoppages in Textile Industries.
1953Apr. 367-371.
Trends. Analysis of Strikes, 1927-49. 1951Jan. 1-7.
Union Strike Vote Practices and Proposed Controls.1956June
677-679.
Labor-management disputes, foreign countries:The Bank Employee
Strike in Argentina. 1959Sept.
1005-1007.International comparisons. Changing Patterns of In
dustrial Conflict. 1960Mar. 229-237. Labor-management relations.
See Industrial relations. Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure
Act:
Findings From the Second Report of the McClellan Committee. 1959
Sept. 983-991.
The Legislative Recommendations of the McClellan Committee.
1958May 518-520.
Presidential Recommendations for Labor Legislation, 1959.
1959Mar. 278-279.
Proposed Legislation on Labor-Management Relations.1958Jan.
45-47.
Summary of the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act.
1959Oct. 1110-1113.
Labor mobility, United States:Chemists, physicists, and
biologists. Occupational Mo
bility of Chemists, Physicists, and Biologists.1953Oct.
1071-1072.
Depressed areas:Labor Recruitment in a Depressed Rural Area.
1958 Oct. 1113-1120.Worker Mobility in a Labor Surplus Area.
1957
Dec. 1451-1456.Electronic technicians:
Mobility of Electronic Technicians. 195IfMar. 263- 266.
Worker Mobility in Three Skilled Occupations. 1955July
772-775.
Factors. Long-Term Factors in Labor Mobility and Unemployment.
1959Aug. 876-881.
Foundry molders. Worker Mobility in Three Skilled Occupations.
1955July 772-775.
Job finding and choice. Job Finding and the Theory of Job
Choice. 1955Oct. 1139-1144.
Job Tenure of American Workers. 1952Sept. 257-262. Mining area.
Labor Supply for Manufacturing in a
Coal Area. 195kDec. 1327-1330.Pension Plans Under Collective
Bargaining: Pt. IThe
Extent and Nature of Vested Rights in Pension Plans and Their
Relationship to the Problems of Labor Mobility. 1953Mar.
237-245.
Secondary labor force. Manpower Measures and the Secondary Labor
Force. 1958July 731-736.
Skill transferability. A Reexamination of Transfer- ability of
Skills,Part I. Part II. 1957July 803-810, Aug. 938-948.
Tool and die makers :Backgrounds and Career Choice of Tool and
Die
Makers. 1953Jan. 8-12.The Mobility of Tool and Die Makers.
1952Dec.
605-610.Worker Mobility in Three Skilled Occupations.
1955July 772-775.
Labor mobility, United StatesContinued Trenton, N.J. Employment
Practices in Trenton, N.J.,
Manufacturing Plants. 1955Feb. 192-195. Unemployment and Job
Mobility. 1960Apr. 350-358.
Labor mobility, foreign countries. See European economic
integration.
Labor movement, United States (see also Labor organizations)
:
American Labor in the Next Decade. 1952July 1-6. The Changing
Nature of the Union. 1960Aug. 843-
845.Coming Developments in Labor Relations. 1953June
609-611.Contemporary Structural Changes in Organized Labor.
1957 Oct. 1186-1188.Federation constitutions. Principles and
Objectives in
U.S. Labor Federation Constitutions. 1955July 787-789.
Labor Ideology and Practice in Europe and the U.S.1958 Mar.
265-269.
National defense period. See Defense mobilization and
policiesLabor and labor problems.
National emergencies. A Bibliography on Labor in National
Emergencies. 1951Oct. 414-419.
New Organizing by Unions During the 1950s. 1960 Sept.
922-924.
Observations on the Changing Nature of American Unions. 1957Feb.
151-154.
Perlmans Theory of the Labor Movement. 1951Feb. 121-126.
The Power Motivations of the American Labor Movement. 1953Mar.
258-260.
The Rebirth of the Labor Movement. 1956Feb. 171. Structural
Changes in the American Labor Movement.
1957Feb. 146-150.Voluntarism in the American Labor Movement.
195k
Sept. 967-971.West Coast: Trade Union Characteristics,
Membership,
and Influence. 1959 May 530-535.Labor movement, Puerto Rico.
Labor Unions and Labor
Relations. 1955Dec. 1359-1362.Labor movement, territories. See
Industrial relations,
territories.Labor movement, foreign countries (see also Labor
or
ganizations) :Belgian Congo. Freedom of Association for
Congo
Workers. 1957 Sept. 1096.British West Indies. Trade Unionism in
the British
West Indies. 1956Dec. 1394-1400.Europe. Labor Ideology and
Practice in Europe and
the U.S. 1958Mar. 265-269.Finland. Labor Situation in Finland,
1949 to 1951.
1951Aug. 144-147.France. The Political Problems of the Free
French
Labor Movement. 1953Nov. 1162-1164.Great Britain:
A Survey of British Trade Unions. 1959 Sept. 1008-1013.
Trade Unions Role in Great Britain: Unions in the Welfare State.
Unions and Higher Productivity. 1956Oct. 1175-1181..
International. The Course of Ideology in International Labor.
1960Oct. 1031-1038.
Latin America. Latin American Labor Unions. 1960 June
615-622.
Philippines. Effects of the Philippine Industrial Peace Act.
195kMay 551.
Viet-Nam:The Labor Movement in the Communist Zone of Viet-
Nam. 1956May 534-537.Trade-Union Movement in Vietnam.
1951Jan.
30-33.Digitized for FRASER http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/ Federal
Reserve Bank of St. Louis
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Labor organizations, United States (s.ee also Labor movement)
:
AFL-CIO Meeting on Industrial and Labor Force Changes by 1965.
1958Mar. 287-290.
AFL-CIO merger:The Effects of the AFL-CIO Merger. Feb.
174-175.Founding convention. See ConventionsAFL-CIO,
this section.Import of the AFL-CIO Merger for Management.
1956Dec. 1427-1429.Text of the AFL-CIO Merger Agreement.
1955
Apr. 428-430.Atomic energy. See that title.Auto Workers. See
Ethical practices, this section;
Management decisionsUAW.Bargaining power. See under* Collective
bargaining. Communism:
Anti-Communist Provisions in Union Constitutions. 19 5 IfOct.
1097-1100.
Communism in Trade Unions. 1954Feb. 139-141. Conventions:
American Federation of Labor :70th. 1951Nov. 547-551.71st.
1952Nov. 499-501.72d. 1953Nov. 1165-1170.73d. 1954Nov.
1199-1204.
American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial
Organizations:
Founding. 1956Feb. 141-149.2d biennial. 1958Feb. 146-152.3d
biennial. 1959Nov. 1206-1210.
Automobile Workers:13th. 1951June 648-651.14th. 1953May
496-501.15th. 1955May 52&-532.16th. 1957June 697-701.
Clothing Workers. 20th biennial. 1956July 776- 779.
Communications Workers:7th, 1953Aug. 830-832.9th. 1955Aug.
903-905.10th. 1956Aug. 916-919.
Congress of Industrial Organizations :12th. 1951Jan. 8-12.13th.
1951Dec. 669-671.14th. 1953Jan. 13-17.15th. 1954Jan. 7-10.16th.
1955Feb. 183-187.
Garment Workers. 29th. 1956July 776-779. Hosiery Workers. 40th.
1952June 648-652. Machinists:
23d. 1952Dec. 639-641.24th. 1956Nov. 1292-1294.
Mine Workers, 41st. 1952Dec. 641-643. Steelworkers:
6th. 1952July 22-24.9th. 1958Nov. 1264-1266.10th. 1960Dec.
1296-1300.
Teamsters. 17th. 1957Nov. 1335-1338.Textile Workers Union of
America:
7th. 1952June 648-652.9th. 1956July 776-779.
Corrupt practices (see also Ethical practices, this section;
Health, welfare, and pension plansAdministration and operation;
Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act). AFL-CIO Suspension
Notice to Teamsters Union. 1957Nov. 1338.
Democracy in unions. See Internal affairs, this section.
Educational activities (see also Education) :
CIO Training for Active and Effective Local Leadership. 1952Feb.
140-144.
IAM Training for Active Participation in Local Lodges. 1952June
653-657.
Labor organizations, United StatesContinued Educational
activitiesContinued
ILGWU Approach to Leadership Training. 1951 Nov. 529-535.
Union Training Program of the AFL Paper Unions.1952 Apr.
395-399.
Ethical practices:AFL-CIO Ethical Practices Codes 5 and 6.
1957
July 838-840.Codes [1-4] of Ethical Practices of the Labor
Move
ment. 1957Mar. 350-353.UAW Public Review Board: First Annual
Report.
1959Mar. 284-287.Finances. Financing of Union Activities.
1952Oct.
373-380.Government, Federal. The Governments Industrial
Employees. IExtent of Employment, Status, and Organization.
1954Jan. 1-6.
Internal affairs:Decisionmaking Under Collective Bargaining.
1957
Sept. 1059-1063.Efforts at Democratic Union Participation.
1958
Mar. 253-254.Election and Tenure of International Union
Officers.
1958Nov. 1221-1229.Factors in the Selection of Local Union
Officers.
1953 July 752-753.Historical Traits and Union Democracy.
1958June
603-605.Labors Public Responsibility: Growth of Social
Consciousness in Internal Union Affairs. 1960 Jan. 22-25.
Power and the Pattern of Union Government. 1958 June
605-607.
Requirements for Union Democracy. 1958Mar. 255-257.
Research on the Attitudes of Trade-Union Members,1953June
592-595.
State Laws on Rights of Members in Internal Union Affairs.
1958Aug. 871-877.
Union Efforts Toward Greater Membership Participation. 1957Oct.
1196-1199.
Union Monopoly Power and Responsibility. 1958 June 601-602.
The Usefulness of the Law in Obtaining Union Democracy. 1958Mar.
258-259.
International affairs (see also Labor organizations,
international) :
American Activities in the International Labor Field.1952 Apr.
422-425.
European Developments and American Foreign Policy. 1953Nov.
1160-1162.
The Foreign Policy Role of American Trade Unions,1953 Nov.
1157-1160.
Latin American Labor Unions. 1960June 615-622. The Political
Problems of the Free French Labor
Movement. 1953Nov. 1162-1164.Membership:
BLS statistics. Limitations of Union Membership Data. 1955Nov.
1265-1269.
Membership of American Trade Unions, 1956. 1957 Oct.
1202-1210.
Structure and Membership of the Labor Movement [1954]. 1955Nov.
1231-1239.
Trends and Causes of Growth in Union Membership.1954 Aug.
871-874.
Union Membership, 1958. 1960Jan. 1-9.West Coast. See under Labor
movement.
National defense:The American Labor Movement in Past
Emergencies.
1951Oct. 430-432.American Trade-Unions in the Present
Emergency.
1951Oct. 409-413.The Impact of Emergencies on Labor
Organizations.
1951Oct. 388-393.Digitized for FRASER
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16
Labor organizations, United StatesContinuedNo-raiding
agreement:
First Year of AFL-CIO No-Raiding Agreement.1955 Aug. 914.
19th Century Attempts at a Trade Union No-Raiding Pact. 1955Aug.
913-914.
Text of the AFL-CIO No-Raiding Agreement. 1954 Jan. 38-40.
Text of the AFL-CIO Resolution on Interunion Raids. 1958Apr.
410.
Organizational campaign. The Failure of Communication in an
Organizing Campaign. 1951Oct. 1200- 1201.
Retirement adjustment. Retirement-Conditioning Training Under
Union Sponsorship. 1951July 846-848.
Social security. Some Observations of Labor on Retirement
Security. 1951Dec. 699-702.
Steelworkers. A Steel Companys View of the Local Union. 1953Oct.
1075-1077.
Strike controls:Strike-Control Provisions in Union
Constitutions.
1954 May 497-500.Union Strike Vote Practices and Proposed
Controls.
1956 June 677-679.Teamsters (see also Corrupt practices, this
section).
Structure and Policy in the Teamsters Union. 1951Oct.
1183-1185.
Trusteeship Provisions in Union Constitutions. 1959 Nov.
1191-1197.
Typographers. The International Typographical Union. 1952May
493-498.
Labor organizations, foreign countries (see also Labormovement)
:
Canada. 1951 Conventions of Canadian Labor Federations. 1951Dec.
692-694.
France. Activities of French Labor Unions in 1949-51. 1951June
642-647.
Germany:The Third West German Trade Union Congress.
1955 Jan. 87-88.Unions in Democratic and Soviet Germany.
1953
Jan. 1-7.[West] German Bundestag Elections and Organized
Labor. 1958Feb. 181-182.Great Britain:
Finances of British Trade Unions. 1956Aug. 934- 935.
Legislative Reforms for British Trade Unions. 1958May
520-522.
The 1951 Meeting of the British TUC. 1951Nov. 559-561.
Ninetieth Annual Meeting of British Trades Union Congress.
1958Nov. 1267-1268.
India. Social and Economic Proposals of Indias Leading Trade
Union. 1955Apr. 451.
Japan. ZenroA New Anti-Communist Labor Center in Japan. 1954Aug.
883-884.
Malaya. Growth of Democratic Trade-Unions in the Federation of
Malaya. 1951 Sept. 274-276.
Netherlands. Council of Trade Union Federations in the
Netherlands. 1958Feb. 180.
Soviet Union:Eleventh Congress of Soviet Trade Unions. 1954
Sept. 987-990.Extension of Trade Union Functions in the
Soviet
Union. 1958Dec. 1390-1391.Labor organizations,
international:
European Union Research and Engineering Services.1959July
757-760.
Free Labor and the European Economic Community. 1958Aug.
877-879.
Labor organizations, internationalContinuedInternational
Confederation of Free Trade Unions:
Congress, proceedings of2d. 1951 Sept. 265-269.3d. 1953Oct.
1055-1062.4th. 1955July 785-787.
Operations of the ICFTU During 1951-53. 1953Nov. 1191-1196.
Organization of Common-Market Trade Unions. 1958Apr. 411.
Progress of the ICFTU in Underdeveloped Areas. 1951 Sept.
270-273.
International Labor Activities in Latin America.1954 Deb.
179-180.
The International Trade Secretariats. 1953Apr. 372-380.
The Textile Union Work Study Conference. 1959 July 761-763.
Labor problems, United States. Labor Problems in a National
Emergency. 1951Oct. 383-387.
Labor problems, foreign countries:Australias Labor Problems and
Policies, 1951. 1951
July 26-30.Belgian Congo. Native Labor Problems in the
Belgian
Congo, 1954Aug. 884-885.Labor standards and programs, United
States (see also
Defense mobilization and policiesManpower; Department of Labor;
Economic conditionsCEA and Presidents reports) :
The Farm Worker in America. 1959Apr. 396-398. National
Conference on Labor Legislation:
1950. 1951Jan. 45-49.1951. 1952Jan. 12-15.1952. 1953Jan.
18-22.1954. 1954Apr. 418-419.
Labor standards and programs, foreign countries. Bell Mission
Recommendations on Philippine Labor. 1951Jan. 52.
Labor statistics, foreign countries:BLS Contributions to
Statistical Work in Other Coun
tries. 1955Jan. 26-29.New Developments in European Labor
Statistics.
1953May 490-495.Labor turnover:
BLS statistics:Measurement of Labor Turnover. 1953May 519-
522.Twenty-Five Years of BLS Turnover Statistics.
1954Aug. 887-890.Layoffs and accessions. Three BLS Series as
Business
Cycle Turn Signals. 1959 Sept. 973-976.New England. See
Textiles, this section.New Hires as a Source of Factory Workers,
1950-54.
1955 June 666-670.The Older Worker: Status in the Labor
Market.
1951Jan. 15-21.Textiles. New England: Labor Turnover in
Textile
Mills. 1951Mar. 306-309.Women. Labor Turnover of Women Factory
Workers,
1950-55. 1955Aug. 889-894.Laundries, power. See under Wage
chronologies; Wages
and hours.Layoffs. See Labor turnover; and under Collective
bar
gaining agreements.Leather tanning and finishing. See under
Wages and
hours.Legislation, United States, Federal:
Coal-mine inspection. Federal Law to Prevent Major Coal-Mine
Disasters, 1952. 1952Nov. 505-507.
Defense Production A ct:Amendments of 1951. 1951 Sept. 299-301.
Amendments of 1952. 1952Aug. 191-192.
The Housing Act of 1954. 1954 Sept. 990-995. Labor-Management
Reporting and Disclosure Act. See
that title.Migration and migratory labor. Federal Law on Mi
gratory Labor, 1951. 1951 Sept. 301-302.Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/ Federal