Word: depending
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...also taken on a job which some auto companies prefer to leave to outsiders, the highly specialized job of making his own bodies. It will be some two months before the huge presses to stamp them out are in the plant. Outside of this, Hunt will have to depend almost entirely on outside suppliers for his parts-motors from Continental Motors Corp., wheels from Kelsey-Hayes Wheel Co., etc.-whereas most other automakers turn out a good share of their parts themselves. Thus, he will be hit doubly hard by the partsmakers strikes now plaguing the industry...
...largest union in the U.S., have more than 800,000 members, contracts with 1,100 plants which make not only steel ingots but such more or less related products as nuts & bolts, thermometers, radiators, hardware, motors, refrigerators, kitchenware, paving bricks, caskets. More than 3,000,000 other U.S. workers depend on steel furnaces for the raw material which keeps them busy...
...people, but there must be some place for a man who is willing to work and who wants to become a part of your organization." A seaman second class was even more determined: "For my own part, I have resolved that my happiness in future work will depend to a large extent on whether I can be a useful member of an organization which works in the interest of humanity." These observations can mean only that a majority of these veterans want jobs that will give them a chance to do more than just make a living. They say, frankly...
...believe that this is the time to settle on general wage increases," said a Ford letter to the union. "The wage rates we will be able to pay will, after reconversion is completed and we have reached volume production, depend entirely on' these two questions: whether we are able to keep other costs down while obtaining better productivity from our employes...
...such a race, Russia would depend largely on two scientists: big, bulky Abram Feodorovitch Joffe, distinguished for work in electronics and molecular physics; and Dr. Peter Kapitza, who visited Moscow in 1935, after 13 years at Britain's Cambridge, and was refused permission to leave when he made ready to return. Tweedy, pipe-smoking Peter Kapitza has been there ever since, and he said he was perfectly happy when Dr. Langmuir saw him in Moscow last June...