*** Welcome to piglix ***

L. B. Day


L. B. Day (February 22, 1932 – October 24, 1986) was an American labor union leader and elected official in the state of Oregon. Day served as an International Brotherhood of Teamsters official, state representative, state senator, and appointed official in both the Oregon state executive office and the U.S. Department of the Interior. A longtime supporter of the Oregon State Fair, the L. B. Day Comcast Amphitheatre on the Oregon State Fairgrounds in Salem is named in his honor.

Day was born in Omaha, Nebraska to Neva and Luther B. Day (1889 – 1938), who was a Nebraska Supreme Court justice. Day attended the University of Nebraska for a year before moving to Oregon. He graduated from Willamette University in 1958, earning a B.A. in political science and history. He attended Willamette Law School for a year before turning his attention full-time to union activism.

Day began working for Teamsters Local 670 in 1958. This local represented cannery workers in Oregon's Willamette Valley. Author Brent Walth noted that Day viewed his role with the Teamsters as a crusader, working to clean up a union often accused of connections to organized crime. Day's brother Frank noted Day's "talent for persuading people." Day quickly rose from working as a union organizer of cannery workers to serving as secretary-general of the local.

Day was elected to the Oregon House of Representatives as a Democrat in 1964, representing Salem's House District 31. He was reelected in 1966 and 1968 before deciding to focus once more upon his union duties. In 1967, he switched parties and became a Republican. Walth describes this shift as one of practicality: "The Republicans were in charge of the house and L.B. Day wanted to win."


...
Wikipedia

...