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Word: plants (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...factory that Bridgestone bought was aging and underutilized: 400 of its 1,000 workers had been laid off by Firestone. Before the Japanese took over, the plant produced barely 700 tires a day. Bridgestone kept on all workers still on the job and rehired the 400 who had been furloughed. But employees still feared the worst -- wrongly, as it turned out. "Everybody kind of expected that they would have to work a lot harder," says Sherrill. "But what we've found is that they just want you to work faster. They'll invest , money in new machinery in a heartbeat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Working for the Japanese | 9/14/1987 | See Source »

Late last week a cordon of Montana State University police stepped aside as Gary Strobel, a professor of plant pathology, led a group of onlookers to a stand of 13 American elms in the Bozeman campus research grove. He took a chain saw and severed the trees six inches above the ground. Then the trunks were sawed into sections and trucked to an incinerator. The stumps were doused with a powerful herbicide, and the surrounding soil was fumigated. Said a tearful Strobel: "Now maybe I can go back to other things...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Montana State's Troublesome Elms | 9/14/1987 | See Source »

...start the elm test last June. Geneticist Duane Jeffery of Brigham Young University likens Strobel's actions to Oliver North's, contending that the scientist knew the rules and pulled the idealistic stunt "in the name of service to humanity." Strobel is a recognized expert on plant pathogens who once wrote that his career choice "was brought on by a desire as a teenager to understand why the chestnut trees had died in my home state of Ohio." He has argued all along that his bacteria posed no threat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Montana State's Troublesome Elms | 9/14/1987 | See Source »

...three others were seriously injured when a driver, whom they had beaten, got back into his truck and ran them over. Some 13,000 strikers occupied the yard, smashing windows, setting fire to cars and battling riot police. Late in the week police raided Hyundai and a second occupied plant and dragged away 200 strikers. Alarmed by the disturbances, Kim and Roh vowed to push for revision of South Korea's labor laws, which largely favor management...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Korea Two Steps Forward, One Back | 9/14/1987 | See Source »

...across the Monongahela River from Pittsburgh. It was the site of historic labor-management strife in 1892, when striking workers lost a bloody (ten dead) battle with armed, union-busting Pinkerton agents hired by the Carnegie Steel Co. More recently, after U.S. Steel (now the USX Corp.) closed a plant that had provided about 15,000 jobs, the town commanded attention as a victim of the economic tides that have sunk smokestack industries. Last week Homestead blurted into national attention yet again -- this time because of a police campaign to solve a series of rapes by seeking the fingerprints...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Trying To Trace a Rapist | 9/14/1987 | See Source »

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