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‘A Woman’s Place’
There are more than 26,000 female non-members in APWU-represented jobs, and it is the intent of the union to conduct an aggressive one-on-one, woman-to-woman organizing campaign.
A coordinated campaign led by women officers at the national, state and local levels, it will specifically address women’s issues under the banner of “A Woman’s Place Is in Her Union. Join Now!” (Click here for details.) |
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Animated by Mike Konopacki |
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While in Washington, Woody acquired Pete Seeger as a traveling companion for the trip to Oklahoma [May 1940].... Arriving in Oklahoma City, they contacted the local Communist Party organizers, Bob and Ina Wood, who put them to work singing for the poor desperate people in the Hooverville on the banks of the Canadian River, and then for the striking oil workers and the Unemployed Workers' Alliance....
They spent the night with the Woods.... Although Woody later wrote that his song "Union Maid" was inspired by the story of a southern Tenant Farmers' Union organizer... it's probable that Ina Wood was a more direct influence. A militant feminist, she criticized Pete and Woody for never singing any songs about the women in the labor movement, and Woody responded that night by writing a parody of "Red Wing"....
Pete's first reaction, when he saw the song the next morning, was that it was kind of dumb. But it began to grow on him. It was so artless and simple, and direct.... Like almost everything Woody wrote... it was written for the ear more than the eye.... For the next decade, "Union Maid" would be Woody's most popular song, appearing in union songbooks and sung on picket lines all over the country. |
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Maid There
once was a union maid, she never was afraid Oh,
you can't scare me, I'm sticking to the union, This
union maid was wise to the tricks of company spies, You
gals who want to be free, just take a tip from me; |
Be informed, stay informed. In knowledge there is power, in unity there is strength.