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Show 'EMPLOYERS STUDY PLANS FOR STEADIER JOBS Cooperating with the 16,000 members of the National Association Associa-tion of Manufacturers in their study o( plans "to make production produc-tion steadier and jobs more regular" regu-lar" will bo tho National Industrial Council which represents more than 40,000 employers, Clarence B Randall, national vice president of tho NAM, announced last week. He is vice president of Chicago's Inland Steel Co. "This will be the greatest call to action in the industrial history of our country," Mr. Randall added. Research on the problem of employment em-ployment stabilization began years ago, Mr. Randall pointed out, but World War II pushed other issues to the foreground. 'We want to know what are the things that lie within the control of management that will tend to create steadier production and steadier employment," he said. He emphasized that management could advance skills in administration adminis-tration and intelligence to make proper decisions to steady production, produc-tion, and added: "The profits of the country will be greater. There will be steadier work for the employees, and the whole community will benefit. "I do not claim that the NAM knows all the answers. I do know, however, that if the answers can be found, the leaders of American industry will find them!" |