Reprinted from past issues of the Seafarers LOG.1942
During the last week of February, the SIU-crewed S.S. Marore was attacked about midnight by three German submarines. Even though she was torpedoed and hit by over 100 shells, the entire crew escaped in lifeboats. One of the boats rigged a sail and made port at Cape Hatteras. The other two boats, containing 25 men, were spotted by a Navy plane which directed a ship to their rescue.
1955
The membership of the Seafarers International Union, Atlantic & Gulf District, ratified a newly negotiated contract clause establishing a seniority hiring provision with contracted companies. The new hiring system involves three classes of seniority. Men sailing before Dec. 31, 1950 got “A” ratings; men sailing regularly since Jan. 1, 1951 were rated Class “B” and men who had no time aboard SIU ships before Jan. 1, 1955 or who had not shipped regularly during the periods to cover classes A and B received a “C” rating. In the future, seamen with “A” ratings will receive preference over the other two categories for job calls and the “B” rated seamen will receive preference over “C” men.
1966
Three AFL-CIO maritime unions have charged that the U.S. State Department’s recently announced blacklist of ships trading with North Vietnam will not deter shipowners or their governments from supplying the North Vietnamese regime. In a joint position, the International Longshoremen’s Association, the National Maritime Union and the Seafarers International Union of North America said that the time for “pussyfooting is long past” and that they would soon begin “protest demonstrations” in all U.S. ports against vessels of those nations which permit trade with North Vietnam.
The joint union position was set forth in a telegram to President Lyndon B. Johnson on February 14. Identical wires were also sent to Commerce Secretary John Connor, Labor Secretary Willard Wirtz and Secretary of State Dean Rusk.
1997
The Paul Hall Center for Maritime Training and Education has enhanced and expanded its curriculum for entry-level mariners. For years, the trainee program exclusively has consisted of 12 weeks of training at the center’s Lundeberg School of Seamanship. Now, following an extensive internal review of the class, the revised program will feature 90 days of shipboard training plus increased schooling at the center in Piney Point, Md. Overall, the new curriculum will last about 2.5 times as long as the old class…. Many of the revisions were made so that students may comply with amendments to an international maritime treaty governing the methods used to train and certify merchant mariners. Parts of that agreement—the International Convention on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for mariners (STCW)—took effect February 1, and other segments will be phased in during the next few years.