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...campaign director Vin Maloney in a recent interview refuted that claim, saying that city crews clean and wax the floors "after hours and without...

Author: By Richard H. P. sia, | Title: Mayor Sullivan Campaigns For Sheriff on City Time | 9/16/1974 | See Source »

...Maloney, a former city editor of the Providence Journal and media coordinator for Kevin White's 1970 gubernatorial bid here, said Sullivan may be relying too heavily on his Cambridge base to propel him to higher office...

Author: By Richard H. P. sia, | Title: Mayor Sullivan Campaigns For Sheriff on City Time | 9/16/1974 | See Source »

...bedding girls from the Follies and beating the cards and dice, of winning on the "bangtails" at the track and the time in New Orleans he lit a cigar with a C-note. Hughie was his audience, the receptacle of the deceits that keep Erie alive. Charley (Peter Maloney), the new clerk, listens in the dim lobby with a sort of it-takes-all-kinds distraction, but eventually and subtly is transformed into the new Hughie, Erie's collaborator in his own illusions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: The Uses of Illusion | 4/22/1974 | See Source »

Rarely has a judge from the National Labor Relations Board ever spoken out so passionately over a classic confrontation between a company and a union. Last week Walter H. Maloney, an NLRB administrative law judge, ruled that the Farah Manufacturing Co. is "flouting the [National Labor Relations] act and trampling on the rights of its employees as if there were no act, no board and no Ten Commandments." The El Paso-based company, one of the nation's biggest makers of men's pants, has been struggling for 20 months with some 2,000 strikers, mainly Mexican Americans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: Blow to Farah | 2/11/1974 | See Source »

...strikers, a minority of the 9,000 Farah employees who were scattered in nine plants in the Southwest, were easily replaced by the company from the large pool of poor, nonunion Mexican American workers in the region. In his decision, however. Judge Maloney ordered Farah to reinstate the strikers, along with the six employees whose dismissal for union activities had triggered the strike. The company, he ruled, must grant the union access to its plants to organize the workers. Finally, Farah was told to pay not only the union's legal costs but also those of the NLRB...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: Blow to Farah | 2/11/1974 | See Source »

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