Word: cars
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Hiring. The euphoria has not abated. Some Sikorsky workers, sure of their jobs for the next decade, have gone on spending sprees. Says Precision Grinder Elwood Worcester, 44: "I bought my wife a new car for Christmas, a $6,200 Chevrolet. We are going to Europe this summer; because now I can spend some of my savings and put it back later, I don't have to worry." For some junior executives, the UTTAS contract means instant advancement. Ken Rosen, 36, was propulsion manager for UTTAS; now he is engineering manager for the whole program. "UTTAS certainly advanced...
...which means he is "down the drain $2,000 a year." Toolmaker Hubert Willis, 44, after 13½ years at the company, was laid off last October. Says he: "I felt I would be coming back because we would get UTTAS. I wasn't thinking about getting a car or anything like that, but putting my daughter through school. How am I going to do that...
...earth fashion. After high school, he started at a $12-a-week job selling newspaper subscriptions. By age 20 he had worked himself up to being Long Island's youngest newspaper editor, on the Smithtown Star. One morning in 1933, Church Dropout Henry found himself in a car discussing religion with an ardent layman. After three hours, he says, "I made a commitment to Christ. I knew my life was no longer my own." So even the faith of a rationalist was born in a typical Evangelical...
...group staged the demonstration to voice opposition to the University's involvement with "racist policies" and to gain more support for CAR, Nancy Bancroft '63, Harvard CAR leader, said Saturday...
Firing what one member called "the opening shot in a spring campaign against racism," forty members of the Boston and Harvard chapters of the Committee Against Racism (CAR) demonstrated at Holyoke Center Saturday afternoon...