Word: pa
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Minor Sport H--James E. Bacon, New Canaan, Conn.; Charles F. Elliott, Belmont; Washington A. Flagg, Jr., Old Westbury, L. I.; David Symmes, Franconia, N. H.; Charles W. Ufford, Jr., Haveford, Pa.; John G. Ward, Short Hills, N. J.; David Watts, Short Hills, N. J.; Morris W. Wood, Jr., Ambler. Pa.; Frederick F. Sears, Manager, Prides Crossing...
...Dallas, Pa...
...Sawyer had reluctantly taken over the job of running the mills. Out went telegrams to 71 steel companies. Up went the symbols of federal possession: the U.S. flag, seizure orders on company bulletin boards. In the crowded taverns and along the main streets of grimy steel towns like Homestead, Pa., steelworkers celebrated the outcome, ready to stream back to work. About 800,000 tons of steel had been lost by banking the furnaces in anticipation of a strike. But after a few angry murmurs from steelmen, the mills headed back to full operation...
While working at the Midvale (Pa.) Steel Works in the 1880s, young Taylor made a discovery: it was the workers, not the bosses, who determined the production rate. The workers could go only so fast because, having learned their jobs by rule of thumb, they wasted steps, motion and time. Using a stopwatch, Taylor found that he could determine the most efficient speed for every operation by breaking it into its component parts...
...using only hammers, pins and wedges. Gunnison says its shelter is better looking than the Quonset huts, has no space-wasting curves, can be painted more easily, gives better protection in combat areas. Shelter production will start within a year at a new plant at Shiremanstown, Pa...