The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 07, 1983, Page Page 10, Image 10

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    Paga 10
Daily Nebraskan
Wednesday, September 7, 1983
talhw leader lOrMandl: Slectlioinis
will he torn fsEiesifc raiiioinis faced
V If CHERRIE ANDERSON'S
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By Jonathan Taylor
AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland said Monday in
Omaha that he believes the 1034 presidential elec
tion is probably one of the most important elections
the unions have faced in his lifetime.
Speaking at a press conference, Kirkland said the
election is significant because of the "grevious
nature of the problems that the country faces, the
unfinished work that needs to be done and the
degree of stress that so many of our (union) broth
ers and sisters are suffering." He said that with the
highest level of unemployment since the great
depression hundreds of thousands of families have
suffered hardship and damage that cannot be
rectified.
Kir klan d was in Omaha on Labor Day to partici
pate in the city's annual salute to labor,
Septemberfest.
Kirkland said fair play is also at stake in the 1934
election. He said the National Trade Relations
Board, supposedly impartial, has been taken over by
"hostile forces" who want to deprive the "working
people of their right to be represented by an effec
tive union." He said the board has been loaded with
"bitter diehard, lifelong enemies of collective bar
gaining and trade unionism."
"WeVe never attempted to load that board with
ardent advocates of trade unionism," he said. "All we
want are fair people (on the board)."
Commenting on the Korean airliner that was shot
down by a Russian warplane, Kirkland said the Uni
ted States must answer the Soviet action with an
effective response.
He said an appropriate response would be to ter
minate or collect on loans made to the Soviet Union
by the United States.
"If our industrialists are to sell our enemies the
rope with which they intend to hang us, we at least
should make them pay cash for it," he said. "We
should not give it to them on easy street."
Kirkland said he is afraid the Reagan administra
tion is not prepared to take retaliatory measures
because it has shown in the days following the inci
dent, a "business as usual" attitude.
Earlier in the day, Kirkland told more than 200
people in a speech in Solidarity Park that some
people may consider the labor movement as just
another "special interest group." But he said the
special interest of the labor movement included jobs
for all Americans, quality education, equal pay for
equal work, and "a fair deal for the family farmer
who is a working man just like us."
Kirkland said the labor movement stands for "jobs
and justice not for a few, not for the privileged, but
foralL"
He said that 81 years ago, Samuel Gompers, the
only other national labor leader to visit Omaha,
spoke of a pendulum of power that swings to and
from the unions' direction. Today, Kirkland said, the
pendulum is sweeping back to the labor movement.
Kirkland participated in Labor Day weekend
parades in New York and Chicago before arriving at
Septemberfest.
S 1 1
. Stiff photo by Dav Eentz
AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland
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