Word: foremans
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Sean followed Francis in name and profession. He served an apprenticeship as stunt man, grip, cameraman and finally director. At first he was merely a foreman, grinding out bathetic stories of cowpokes in leather and gals in gingham. But with The Iron Horse (1924), Ford was abruptly thrust into the front ranks of American film makers. In the tale of a son's search for his father's murderer, Ford composed a stark sagebrush Odyssey that was to echo in almost all his later work. The forces of nature and fate were given substance; the backdrop of plains...
...throughout its history, The Crimson has been primarily people. From Art Hopkins, the linotypist in the forties and fifties who became a Crimson institution, to today's shop foreman Pat Sorrento, the paper has been run by dedicated individuals...
...their trouble by Duke, who promises to spend more time at home in the future. Cahill is a poky, disorganized sort of western, typical of the work of Andrew V. McLaglen (The Way West, The Undefeated), a director on whom Wayne seems to call as he might summon a foreman to keep an eye on his ranch. There are a great many saddle-sore jokes but occasional nice moments too, as when Wayne buffaloes his way through a lynching party. He also spars well with the kids, and he invests an absurdly sentimental recollection of Cahill's dead wife...
...employee must pay only the $25 registration fee charged to all students and must present an Approval Form signed by his foreman, supervisor, dean, or care-taking department head...
...before receiving their degrees. "We have to build a more diverse campus," he says. "We've got to get a dialogue going between the construction workers and the students." Reflecting on his experience, Coleman remembers with deep satisfaction a remark made to him by a 22-year-old foreman named...