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Word: machinist (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Died. Carl Edwards Johansson, 79, Swedish-born father of hair-splitting precision gauges; in Eskilstuna, Sweden. Be ore he was 32, the shaggy-browed toolmaker hand-forged and hand-polished blocks of steel so internally stressless, externally flawless that they could detect a machinist's error to within 2,000,000ths of an inch (a 2,000,000th is to an inch as an inch is to 31.6 miles). Nicknamed "Jo" blocks, they made possible mass production's interchangeability of parts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Oct. 11, 1943 | 10/11/1943 | See Source »

Jerome Connor's friends, however, stoutly defended him. He was transparently, said they, an artist and a man of parts. They recalled that as a child he had gone from County Kerry to the U.S., where he had worked manfully as foundry-man, professional prize fighter, machinist, sign painter, stonecutter and, finally, sculptor. The versatile Connor also found time to serve as a Japanese intelligence officer in Mexico. But it was with the chisel that he really made his mark-most notably with the Nuns of the Battlefield tablet located in Washington, D.C. He was bound, his friends swore...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Irish Story | 9/20/1943 | See Source »

Probably responsible: some lax machinist who cut the part freehand and bored too deep, perhaps because his employer, a smalltime subcontractor, lacked a jig or automatic stop mechanism. An overrushed inspector tossed out some of the faulty parts; some he passed without tests. The fitting joined the right wing strut to the fuselage. Once it was welded into place, its weakness was hidden from final assembly inspections. But when the glider cut loose from the tow plane on its maiden flight, new stresses snapped the too-thin steel. The craft plummeted 1,500 feet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AIR: One-Third of an Inch | 8/23/1943 | See Source »

Dale's Tale. In Richmond Ind., the parents of Dale Allen Hawley, aviation machinist's mate, received a letter from him : "After leaving where we were before we left for here, not knowing we were coming here from there, we couldn't tell whether we had arrived here or not. . . .The weather here is just as it always is at this season. The people are just like they look. I had better close now before I give too much valuable military information...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Miscellany, Jul. 19, 1943 | 7/19/1943 | See Source »

Burton Black, a Warrant Machinist, had never married and was highly respected by his shipmates.... Winona White was a Navy Nurse and a career woman with no intention of losing her independence by entering the gates of matrimony.... A mild case of influenza resulted in Black's being a patient under the care of White, and from then on Black thought more of White and White thought less of a career.... Ignoring all preliminaries, suffice to say that Black maried White...

Author: By Ensign RUTH Wolgast, | Title: Creating a Ripple | 4/23/1943 | See Source »

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