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Forty Years Later, Gary Goff and Henry Foner Reunite in the NYLHA
Work History News, January 2008
If you are looking for a human interest story, you can find one here, in the
ranks of the New York Labor History Association. Here's how it all came about:
In 1970, Work History News Editor Henry Foner was heading the Joint Board
Fur, Leather & Machine Workers Union. He was asked by the workers at Harper
& Row Publishers, who were organized but unaffiliated, to represent them in
their negotiations with the company. When he learned that New York's publishing
industry was almost entirely unorganized, he persuaded his own union to
undertake the job of organizing them. However, before they could issue their
first leaflet, Barney Rosset, the head of Grove Press, fired three of his
editors because he suspected them of being responsible for the organizing
campaign. To add to the irony of the situation, Grove Press and Rosset had
reputations as mavericks in the book publishing industry, having published, for
the first time, the works of such authors as Henry Miller and Allen Ginsberg.
Rosset may have been a maverick, but he was not about to sit by while his
editorial workers organized the industry, and so the union's first struggle
became one of getting the three workers reinstated. Among the union's strongest
supporters was a young worker named Gary Goff. It was a weird campaign: not
only was the union involved in trying to win a Labor Board election to represent
the editorial workers, but it was also mobilizing them for the anti-Vietnam war
marches that were very much on the agenda at the time. To get idea of the
situation, when the union challenged Rosset to a debate at one of its meetings,
he accepted and upbraided the union for not "doing enough for the
revolution."
During contract negotiations, the union was able to guarantee that, whatever
the outcome of the election, it would be able to arbitrate the discharges. When
it lost the election by a small margin and Rosset expected it to fade into the
woodwork, it redoubled its efforts to win the arbitration and get the workers
back on their jobs.
The arbitration itself contained enough drama to be made into a movie. One of
the company's charges against a discharged employee was that she had gone into
Rosset's office at the end of the day and written graffiti on his walls. To
bolster its case, it brought in the world-renowned handwriting expert, Harold
Osborne, who blithely testified that the graffiti matched the handwriting of
one of the discharged employees. The union's brilliant attorney, Harold Cammer,
sized up Osborne perfectly. After eliciting the latter's modest admission that
he was probably one of the foremost handwriting experts in the world, Cammer
asked him quite innocently if his testimony had ever been challenged. What
happened next could only be compared with the famous scene in the movie, The
Caine Mutiny, in which Humphrey Bogart goes to pieces in a similar incident.
The arbitrator quickly dismissed Osborne and ordered the workers reinstated to
their jobs.
Now fast forward for almost half a century. Foner, by now retired
and editing the Work History News, receives word that a British film company is
filming a documentary on Barney Rosset and wants Foner to tell the story of his
dealings with the noted publisher. At the same time, he learns from another
union publication the Public Employee Press that Goff is now the
vice-president of one of New York's municipal employees' unions. As a result,
Goff has (1) agreed to join the New York Labor History Association, and (2)
volunteered to include his statement in the Rosset documentary.
All that is needed now to round out this fascinating story is the disclosure
of the name of the person who wrote the graffiti on the walls of Barney Rosset's
office. Foner and Goff are both sworn to secrecy, so don't expect to read it
here.
Reprinted with permission
(Work History News is the newsletter of the NY Labor History
Association.)
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