Taft-Hartley Act—Wayne Morse vs. Robert Taft By Senator Taft, Republican, Ohio The Taft-Hartley law is meeting the test of time and it has been upheld re peatedly in the courts. Public approval of this law is now at its highest point, according to impartial public opinion surveys. The success of those senators and congressmen who supported the law in the recent election again demonstrated its acceptance by the American people. Basically, -the law undertakes to provide equality | between labor and management (1) by preventing 1 unfair labor practices by labor unions while retaining i the same prohibitions against unfair labor practices | by management which were set up by the Wagner I Act, and (2) by subjecting labor unions to the same I obligation to perform their contracts and be other- I wise liable for their acts, to which individuals and corporations are subject. The result is to make the National Labor Relations Board a governmental judicial body instead of an agency of the labor unions. The Taft-Hartley law outlaws the closed shop, closed union which made in dividual workers and young persons seeking* em ployment completely subservient to the whims and caprices of union leaders in order to be able to pur sue their right to earn a living. It protects the American wage earner from orga nized union violence on the picket line and elsewhere. It requires both unions and employers to bargain SENATOR TAFT collectively in good faith and give reasonable notice to the other of a desire to change the terms of a contract. It requires unions to make an annual financial report to their members. It does not otherwise interfere with the internal affairs of unions. The Taft-Hartley law is still vilified by the bosses of the labor unions, but their cam paign against it has been one of distortion, half truths, and fanciful speculations. I have talked to many labor audiences, and I have yet to find anyone who can point to a specific case in which the law has resulted in any unfair treatment of a labor union. Under it, the unions have prospered. They have more members than ever before. They have obtained better wages, working conditions, pensions, and allowances than employees have ever enjoyed before in the history of the world. By Senator Morse, Republican, Oregon One of the basic principles upon which our democracy is built is that of vol untary cooperation. Good labor relations are simply that—voluntary coopera tion between management and labor for their mutual benefit and for the pub lic good. A sound labor policy must meet certain tests. It should accept organized labor as a necessary and desirable group m a demo cratic free enterprise system. It should encourage employers to engage in collective bargaining when a majority of the employees choose a union as their representative. It should encourage employers and unions to work out solutions to their mutual prob lems. It should deal with real problems and abuses by management or labor, and provide fair and work able remedies to protect public or important indi vidual interests. Finally, any Federal law dealing with labor relations should be simple, clear and easily enforceable. Measured by these tests, and viewed in the light of the three years of experience, the Taft-Hartley Act must be condemned as undemocratic, coercive, puni tive and unnecessarily complex. In short, it is an act of legislative hypocrisy. Oji the one hand, and in most pious phrases, it pur SENATOR MORSE ports to protect and provide the means for enforcing the rights of self-organization and collective bar gaining. However, by others of its terms, by the interpolation of trick phrases, by the establishment of devious and endless procedures, and by a monstrous separation of powers which sets one part of the administrative agency against the other, the Taft Hartley Act effectively frustrates and defeats these rights. The sooner Congress repeals the Taft-Hartley Act and replaces it with a law which meets the minimum standards set out above, the better. We must return to a policy which promotes industrial self-government through labor-management cooperation and self-discipline, because in the long run that is the policy most consistent with our system of free enterprise. , The Ougon Daily Eukkald published Monday through Friday during the college year except Oct. 30; Dec. 5 through Jan. 3: Mar 6 through 28; May 7; Nov. 22 through 27; and after May 24, with isues on Nov. 4 and May 12, by the Associated Students of the University af Oregon. Entered as second class matter at the postoffice, Eugene, Oregon. Subscription cates: $5 per school year; $2 per term. Alt it a Holmes, Editor Don Thompson, Business Manager Guest Editors from Washington Peel off Korea and charges of aggression and wage-price freezes. Underneath you’ll find a nation looking at issues such as CVA and socialized medicine and the Taft-Hartley law. Dominant in the America without war is this Taft-Hartley law which was the first major revision in New Deal labor poli cies of the 1930’s. Just four years ago this month a new Cong ress, ruled by Republicans, battled over the bill while labor leaders shuddered. It was passed over the President’s veto on June 23, 1947, and one of its makers, Senator Robert A. Taft was immediately branded by organized labor as the “man to heat in ’50.’’ • Some of his Republican colleagues from the Senate's right side of the aisle strongly upheld this labor bill. And some, one Wayne L. Morse in particular, strongly opposed it. Today the law is moving into its fourth year. The senator from Ohio whose name it bears is talking more about foreign policy and less about labor. And he’s looking closely at a sign post marked White House. Today the law is moving into its fourth year. The sena tor from Oregon who has continually opposed it is talking more about the drafting of 18-year-olds and less about his own Morse-Ives bill. And today both of these men grace the Emerald’s editorial page as guest editors writing on the Taft-Hartley law, a domi nant issue in the America underneath. THE DAILY ... goes to Alice Maier, Helen Jackson, and Stephanie'Scott, who last night received the Mortar Board plaque for hav ing the highest grades among women during their fresh man year. THE OREGON LEMON . . . to the Oregon State College journalist who accused the Ducks of poor sportsmanship following the basketball series of last weekend. Is it sportsmanship or the fact that the Beavers are in the XD cellar that perturbs the Aggie critic so much? Sky’s The Limit 'Don't Give Damnitis' Poisons Our System By Sam Fidman A favored device by which his torians examine the true think ing of men is personal corres pondence, usually written or re ceived by a dignitary of state. There are letters of the Roman emperors, and of Abraham Lin coln, each depicting the flavor of life in their times. In a living democracy the let ters and ideas of the layman, the “common man’,, are truly reflec tive. In the torturous hours in which we live, letter writers seem to have gone philosophical, and more aware bf and more appre ciative of life now that its nor malcy cannot be taken for grant ed. One friend in Los Angeles writes of having developed a painful case of. ‘Won’t give a damnitis.’’ “Honestly,” he writes, “ is there any other way we can feel ?” Well, honestly, there is. To “just accept” a situation is the pivot around which our slump shouldered fatalists are created. No matter how disheartening a situation may become, once the citizens of a democracy abandon the will to discuss and think their way to a solution, they are ripe for loss of their freedom. And what's more, they would deserve it. Some opinions have it that America's youth is facing re sponsibility squarely. This cannot be accepted as a whole truth, since there are eases of mass hookey popping up, and there exists an element that has adopted, or rationalized, its way to the adoption of the oder iferous “don’t give a damn” at titude. That makes for a dangerous es cape from reality at a time when our nation needs realistic think ing as backbone of realistic action, whether that action be on the individual basis or at the high and mighty national governmen tal level. The Second Cup In k^epipg with the March of Dimes campaign just concluded, the following offering on charity is submitted: Charity is the perfection and ornamentation of religion.—Ad dison. ******* He who waits to do a great, deal of good at once, will never do anything. Samuel Johnson. * * * * * * * , It is more blessed to give than to receive. Acts. XX. 35. ******* Charity shall cover the multi tude of sins. I Peter. IV. 8. It Could Be Oregon 4 ‘And now Xo. 9, Professor Snarf—This question is worth $18.73'