Reprinted from past issues of the Seafarers LOG.1945
When Brother Richard Lewis left New York in January 1941 on the City of Alma, a Waterman ship bound for Santos, he never thought the voyage would eventually take him to Shanghai, Manila and the infamous death march of Bataan. But the sequence of unforeseen events did that to this SIU seaman and, recently arrived back in the States, he told a thrilling story of his experiences in the intervening four years….
When it became impossible to leave Manila (where he had been hospitalized), Lewis offered his services to the Army, along with a number of other merchant seamen and was put to work moving supplies from Manila to Corregidor…. Following the surrender on April 9, 1942, Lewis and several other merchant seamen were put in a stockade with Philippine civilians and troops for about a week, after which they were started on the Death March of Bataan. His memories of this experience include the sight of hundreds of Filipino women being raped by foreign soldiers, of soldiers and civilians shot as they tried to get water, of men abandoned by the road to die or be bayoneted by the guards as the procession trudged along. The only food during seven days of the march was what furtive Filipinos managed to pass them along the route…. Brother Lewis himself was lined up for burial, but crawled away before the burial squad did its gruesome work.
1955
In effect for four months, the SIU’s seniority shipping system has been operating smoothly in all ports. No major hitches have developed in any aspect of the program. Three headquarters officials of the union are working full time on administration of the seniority system to assure smooth operation. They are Keith Terpe, director of organization, who is handling seniority matters for the district; A “French” Michelet, chief dispatcher at headquarters; and Freddie Stewart, working with Michelet as dispatcher.
The seniority system was negotiated by the union with the shipowners in March and has been incorporated into the contract along with other membership-approved shipping rules.
1965
The Maritime Trades Department, AFL-CIO, has charged that the efforts to resolve the current collective bargaining dispute in maritime which has immobilized more than 100 vessels is “being thwarted by a handful of willful shipping company officials, representing just eight companies, who have refused to conclude agreements with any of the maritime unions whose contracts are now open for renegotiation.”
MTD President Paul Hall said in a statement forwarded from Amsterdam, Holland, where he had been attending the International Confederation of Free Trade Union Congress as an AFL-CIO delegate, that “this situation is of grave concern to the Maritime Trades Department, which represents hundreds of thousands of workers who are dependent upon the maritime industry for their livelihoods. It is of particular concern at this time when a tripartite effort on the part of maritime labor, management and the government is being made to find ways and means of strengthening and improving the American-flag merchant fleet.”