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...rail strike was only a part of New Yorkers' troubles last week. For out-of-town visitors, for the aged and for expectant mothers in their ninth month, there was the additional labor pain of a taxi strike. It seemed that the complex urban understanding was going through another periodic fit, obeying the logic of a self-destroying machine by Sculptor Jean Tinguely. Titled, perhaps, Immobility...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: American Notes: Comforts of Crisis | 12/21/1970 | See Source »

...home (one presidential aide regularly changes in the car while his wife drives), are likely to be yearning for surcease from the evening's pleasures, the social swirl that is really an extension of the day's business. But not a chance when beside him in limousine or taxi sits his wife?freshly coiffed at Jean-Paul's, swathed in a high style that she never wore in Pascatoola, and dropping names that sound like newspaper headlines. She knows the importance of what lies ahead. She knows precisely what Curtis LeMay was grousing about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Martha Mitchell's View From The Top | 11/30/1970 | See Source »

...week before the opening of the 1970 season, the Oakland Raiders placed Quarterback George Blanda on waivers. George waited and waited. Then, when none of the other 25 teams in the National Football League offered to sign him, he went back to practicing with the Raiders' taxi squad. It did not seem to matter that Blanda had scored more points (1,477), kicked more field goals (240), booted more extra points (703) and completed more passes in one game (37) than any player in the history of professional football. He had just turned 43, and as the oldest player...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: George Blanda Is Alive and Kicking | 11/23/1970 | See Source »

...diminished status. Some of it is portrayed, in crude and exaggerated form, in the much-acclaimed movie Joe. Certainly not all workers are as bigoted as Joe Curran, though his counterpart can be found on any picket line or at the wheel of many a New York City taxi. But his pleasures are real enough?whisky, the bowling alley, a gun collection?and so are his yearnings for a taste of life on the other side of the middle-class line. The blue collar worker wants to take a vacation in some far-off place, but usually cannot. He likes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: The Blue Collar Worker's Lowdown Blues | 11/9/1970 | See Source »

...King. As a City Councillor in the early 1960's, he got the Council to pass a bill to take Straus, Lehman, and Massachusetts Halls by eminent domain, in order to widen Harvard Square streets. He also sponsored a bill to turn Harvard Yard into a bus and taxi terminal, a suggestion which lost by a four-to-five vote. Vellucci said he would compromise for the fifth crucial vote by calling the site the John Harvard Bus and Taxi Terminal. His single resolution which received much enthusiastic student support would have made the Lampoon building a public urinal...

Author: By Samuel Z. Goldhaber, | Title: Profile The People's Mayor | 11/5/1970 | See Source »

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