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Word: machinists (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...publishing this advertisement, we are complicitous. We are forced to acknowledge that for every $29 fare that Eastern sells to our readership, we are contributing $29 to Frank Lorenzo's attempts to bust Eastern's machinist union--which for two grueling months has been on strike, on the picket lines, and off the pay roll...

Author: By Rebecca L. Walkowitz, | Title: The Buck Stops Here | 4/19/1989 | See Source »

Moscow Beginners was started in 1987 by the Rev. J.W. Canty, an Episcopal priest from New York City who came to Moscow in 1985 to help lay the groundwork for the group. Meanwhile, Volodya, 36, a machinist, had heard about A.A. on a Canadian radio broadcast and had written to A.A. headquarters in New York, which in turn informed Canty that he had a taker in Moscow. The group's first session, held in a hotel room across from the Kremlin, was attended by Volodya and two visiting American members of A.A. Membership grew slowly, largely because the group...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Soviet Scene: Moscow Beginners Where Slava Starts Over Again | 4/10/1989 | See Source »

...potential for chaos posed by the machinist strike was nothing compared with that of secondary strikes by railroad and mass-transit workers...

Author: By Brian R. Hecht, | Title: Commuters Unite! | 3/13/1989 | See Source »

Bell Laboratories has long been proud of its thief-resistant pay telephone, boasting that the only way to break into it was to haul the whole contraption away and work on it with sledgehammers or explosives. According to the FBI, John Clark, 49, a former Ohio machinist who wears a shoulder-length ponytail and cowboy clothes, discovered otherwise. He is the only person known to have devised a tool that can pick pay-phone locks. It afforded him a comfortable, if itinerant, living. The FBI estimates that Clark, who sometimes used the alias Billy Bell, may have stolen as much...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Crime: The Downfall Of Billy Bell | 9/12/1988 | See Source »

...stand does not deter Rogers, the son of a machinist and assembly-line worker. Designing strategy in his Manhattan office, often dressed in a T shirt and jeans, he hardly looks imposing. But he can marshal large forces as effectively as many a general. Rogers has sent carloads of United Paperworkers -- "caravans" he calls them -- to gather support at the plants and union halls of other industries. The response has been encouraging: in April more than 8,500 sympathizers from unions around the U.S. converged for a rally at the Jay mill, roughly doubling the town's population...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Labor's Boardroom | 6/20/1988 | See Source »

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