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

...circus colleagues. Everywhere one looks on the lot (that is circus argot, the lot; townsfolk who come to gawk before the show are called, uncharitably, lot lice) there are people doing a dozen jobs, saying nothing else beats the life. Dennis Harvey, ringmaster, welder, electrician: "I'm more settled here than anywhere, strange as it sounds. It's like joining a family." Moira Loter, bareback rider, aerialist, jackie-of-all-trades: "I've lived in a house. You always want to go back on the road." Carlos Bautista, whose family, when not being catapulted off a teeterboard, performs, according...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Oklahoma: a Big Top Moves Out | 5/12/1986 | See Source »

...ever hope to impress upon the contemplative VES student the beauty of a proper marriage of form and function when her dining hall toaster, with the facade of an oxyactylene welder, can not even thaw her single Eggo waffle...

Author: By Barne C. Ellis, | Title: Charred Mornings | 11/6/1985 | See Source »

...raise in two years and has been laid off four times in the past 13 years. Says he: "I'm tired of being laid off. What good is having more money if you don't have a job?" Scott Debruit, 34, a maintenance welder apprentice at the same plant, was temporarily let go from May 1981 to January 1984. He wants to keep on working and voted against the strike authorization. Said he: "I need to catch up. I'm still paying bills from times when I was laid...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Showdown at General Motors | 9/24/1984 | See Source »

...obstetrics waiting room at Norfolk's in-vitro clinic, a woman sits crying. Thirty-year-old Michel Jones and her husband Richard, 33, a welder at the Norfolk Navy yard, have been through the program four times, without success. Now their insurance company is refusing to pay for another attempt, and says Richard indignantly, "they even want their money back for the first three times." On a bulletin board in the room is a sign giving the schedule for blood tests, ultrasound and other medical exams. Beside it hangs a small picture of a soaring bird and the message...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Origins of Life | 9/10/1984 | See Source »

...high noon in Bethesda, Md., home of the National Institutes of Health. The scene: a small French restaurant with hanging baskets and beamed ceiling. On one side of a table sat Dr. Robert Gallo, 47, a brash NIH scientist who started life as the son of a small-town welder and has become one of the nation's leading cancer researchers. Sensitive about his diploma from Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia ("I had to fight to prove I was good, because I didn't go to Harvard"), Gallo gained a reputation in 1980 by becoming the first scientist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: AIDS: Knowing the Face of the Enemy | 4/30/1984 | See Source »

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