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Word: workers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...days later, Flynn and De Sapio put up their own candidate, Manhattan Borough President Robert F. Wagner, 43, an amiable party worker whose father, the late Senator, was one of the city's greatest vote getters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NEW YORK: The Petrified Forest | 8/3/1953 | See Source »

Most U.S. movie critics thought that Paramount's Shane (TIME, April 13) was just a rattling good western about homesteaders v. cattle owners. Last week Manhattan's Communist Daily Worker got around to reviewing the picture, which has just moved into neighborhood theaters, and found a significance in it that all the bourgeois reviewers had missed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Collective Action, Pardner! | 8/3/1953 | See Source »

...Worker likes the picture's historically "accurate" description of the conflict between the landed proletariat and the "terroristic" cattle barons, but it deplores the fact that Hero Alan Ladd follows "the Hollywood strongman tradition," which, "coupled with extreme emphasis on a series of bloody fist fights, constitutes . . . capitulation to current Hollywood standards." Another deviationist error: "The wives of the homesteaders . . . are shown urging their husbands to give up and move on. This is an insult to the great tradition of pioneer women...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Collective Action, Pardner! | 8/3/1953 | See Source »

...Worker draws a modern parallel: "Just as the cattle barons of the '70s, '80s and '90s sought to appropriate unto themselves the range of the public domain, so today, under the Eisenhower Administration, are the modern barons seeking to convert their grazing permits in national parks and other public areas to form a permanent tax-free title." But the main trouble: The film "tends to glorify individual-as opposed to collective-action...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Collective Action, Pardner! | 8/3/1953 | See Source »

Readers of Manhattan's Communist Daily Worker, which steadfastly treated the execution of atom spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg as a capitalist frame-up, were startled last week when the Worker labeled the Rosenbergs "atom spies." The red-faced editors explained they had lifted the story verbatim from a "capitalist press clipping." Apologized the Worker: "We are deeply sorry that slipshod copy-editing permitted this vile attack on the martyred Rosenbergs to appear in our paper...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Frame-up | 7/27/1953 | See Source »

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