Labor seniority systems revised under pressure from black employees and blessed by collective bargaining agreements have improved the economic position of Negro workers long subject to job discrimination. Often however these systems carry forward past discrimination inherent in the original establishment of a “skilled” (white) line of progression and an “unskilled” (black) line of progression. Eleven years ago this Court gave its blessing to the revision of such a system installed at the Houston plant of Armco Steel Corporation that improved the lot of many black employees but still fell short of cleansing progression lines of past racial discrimination. Whitfield v. United Steel Workers of America, 5 Cir. 1959,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
This opinion is signed only to point up the fact that its author was the organ of the Court in both Whitfield and Local 189.
. See Norman v. Missouri Pacific Railroad, 8 Cir. 1969,
