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Word: wheelman (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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When the trial began, Almeida testified how he had been the "wheelman" for Harry the Hook. While the defendant stared at him stonily, Almeida told how he had driven him down Logan's block and intercepted the victim. "I pulled up so the back door was where he was," said Almeida. "He was stepping off the curb when Harry hollered out, 'Hey, Billy, come here." " Almeida heard the shotgun blast and Logan cry out, "Oh, my God!"There was another shot, said Almeida, then Aleman got out and fired a third time. When Aleman got back into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CRIME: The Perils of Doing Your Duty | 6/6/1977 | See Source »

...Momo," he ran the Chicago underworld. His rise in the crime organization built by Al Capone began in his teens on Chicago's West Side, where he was born in 1908, the son of an immigrant grocer. A grade-school dropout, he joined the Chicago Mob as a wheelman, or getaway driver, then graduated to triggerman. Convicted of moonshining in 1939, he managed to turn his four-year sentence to his advantage by cultivating the friendship of Edward Jones, the policy king of Chicago's South Side, who was serving time for income tax evasion. From Jones, Giancana...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE MAFIA: The Demise of a Don | 6/30/1975 | See Source »

Valachi's career coincides with the rise of the Cosa Nostra itself and reads like a kind of how-to-succeed manual for middle-echelon mobsters. At 18, Valachi was already a veteran "wheelman" (getaway driver), but he made the mistake of joining an "Irish gang." That move so displeased the Italian underworld that while Valachi was serving time for theft, he received as chastisement a knife wound that ran under his heart and around to his back, requiring 38 stitches...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: His Life and Crimes | 1/17/1969 | See Source »

Long Hours. Irish-born S. S. McClure worked his way through Illinois' small Knox College as farmhand and peddler. Soon after graduation, he landed a job as editor of a new Boston cycling magazine, the Wheelman, then moved to the staff of the Century Magazine. McClure tried to convince his Century bosses that they should branch out, left when they vetoed his idea and launched the first successful U.S. newspaper syndicate himself. In 1893, on $2,800 in profits from the syndicate and a borrowed stake, McClure started his magazine. At its peak in 1906, Steffens, Tarbell, and Baker...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Great Muckralcer | 4/4/1949 | See Source »

...good time he was graduated. He went to Boston, taught bicycle riding. Then he became editor of the Wheelman, a bicycle paper. He went to New York and started a fiction "syndicate." Finally, in 1893, at 37, he started a magazine. It grew. In two and a half years its circulation was greater than Century, Harper's or Scribner's. That is how the world came to know Samuel Sidney McClure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Direct Action | 3/17/1924 | See Source »

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