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Word: roustabout (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Army, peasants and nomads all came to "Big Bill" Shatov's party. Big Bill had just completed the 1,475-mi. Turksib Railway, linking Siberia and Turkestan. Nothing was too good for him. Soviet orators praised his lurid past as a frequently jailed I. W. W. roustabout all over the U. S. As the senior U. S. Bolshevik in Russia, beaming Big Bill cried, "We old ones have built this road for you- for young, free Russia! You must remember to work in your turn for the Soviet State! Make it strong and great-not for your sake...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA: Fall of Big Bill | 7/31/1933 | See Source »

Four years ago another eccentric fi burst forth upon the world from Newburyport. He was Andrew Joseph ("Bossy") Gillis, 34, a hard-boiled red-headed Irishman with close-set eyes, a screwed-up mouth and a pancake felt hat pushed down over his forehead. Onetime sailor roustabout, he started to erect a filling station on his lawn in contemptuous regard of a city zoning law. He protested at the City Hall and, having "hung one on the the Mayor's jaw," was sentenced to 60 days in the local jail. From then on he began to act like the reincarnation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: End of Lord Andrew | 12/21/1931 | See Source »

...William, home from Harvard by expulsion, astounded him by asking to have the paper for his own. The Chronicle's stormy career under the brothers Charles and Michael De Young was already in its second decade, and the brothers had engaged in individual pistol duels with a traitorous, roustabout reporter, a Communist candidate for Mayor, and the latter's son, who killed Charles...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Half-Century | 12/7/1931 | See Source »

Died. Thomas B. Slick, 47, famed oil wildcatter, "richest independent operator in the world"; of a cerebral hemorrhage, at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore where he had been since June 27. Born in Clarion, Pa., he went in 1906 to the Indian Territory, after serving apprentice- ship as driller, muleskinner, roustabout in the oilfields of Illinois. In 1913 he sold out his holdings in Illinois for $2,500,000; last year his Southwestern holdings brought him $45,000,000 from Prairie Oil & Gas. During his funeral in faraway Clarion, all drilling and pumping operations in the Oklahoma City oilfield were stilled...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Aug. 25, 1930 | 8/25/1930 | See Source »

...history: roustabout on Lisbon docks, sailor, medaled hero. Once he saved eight persons in a fire at sea, was scarred himself. As a ring fighter he is inexperienced. Bertys Perry, his French-American manager, was obliged to teach him not to slug, how to uppercut. Last week he was preparing to sail for the U. S. He wants a Labor Day bout with that Italian Brobdingnagian, Primo Camera (height 6 ft. 6 1/2 in.; weight...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Brobdingnagians | 6/16/1930 | See Source »

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