Both work and family did indeed emerge among the blue-collar workers' core values. |
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Obviously, this applies not only to blue-collar factory workers, but to people who work in offices or the service sector. |
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He treats everyone, be they blue-collar workers or heads of state, with the same respect. |
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The Tokyo economy grew so fast in the 1980s that the city faced a shortage of blue-collar workers. |
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Unemployment among blue-collar workers rose when heavy industry shifted its production focus. |
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My Dad is a retired blue-collar worker, having once been a bus driver in Glasgow, and later a button pusher at the local power station. |
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Give the country boy, blue-collar worker, farmer in Tennessee a voice he can relate to. |
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She is equally comfortable dealing with blue-collar workers and elite patrons. |
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The daughter of a blue-collar factory worker, Anne grew up on a council estate in Bracknell. |
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There were blue-collar workers concerned about losing their jobs to immigrants and rioters. |
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Both are blue-collar workers, and both have enough size, strength and savvy to clog up the middle. |
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He decries the shortage of blue-collar workers which, in his opinion, this allowance will make worse not better. |
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There have also been large numbers of blue-collar workers in service and garment industries. |
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Many manufacturing companies said that they had stepped up hiring of both blue-collar and white-collar workers. |
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Sauer's study is noteworthy because of its emphasis on blue-collar workers at risk. |
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Technically they belong to the cops, but city blue-collar workers have access to them as needed. |
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It depicts a blue-collar worker, but it's afraid to show the work she'd actually do. |
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Born in tough, blue-collar Pittsburgh to a Polish immigrant family, he was an outsider from the start. |
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The city is populated with blue-collar union workers who always vote for Democrats. |
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A narrative that claims we will replace all of the lost blue-collar jobs with new green-collar jobs plays much better. |
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Many of the new green-collar jobs will be taken by blue-collar construction workers. |
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The electorate is changing, from blue-collar rural economy, to a sea change economy, dominated by retirees and eco-tourism. |
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The typical indoor range has concrete floors and a steel backstop, and attracts blue-collar males almost exclusively. |
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Discriminatory recruitment, hiring and promotion practices prevent and discourage women from competing for and remaining in blue-collar jobs. |
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Although women have made some progress especially in white-collar jobs, their presence is still marginal in many blue-collar jobs. |
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Another key event, which marked the financial year, was the creation of a pension fund for blue-collar staff. |
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Many in industry believe that the prestige of blue-collar jobs has declined, and that talented young people no longer seek them out. |
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The blue-collar sector posted a 173-percent increase in employment from 1992 to 1997, stronger than the growth in the pink-collar temping. |
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There are ultrareligious enclaves and secular contingents, professionals and blue-collar workers, the politically active and the uninvolved. |
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In the third quarter, he poured it on, racking up 19 points in his inimitably blue-collar fashion. |
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College towns, upscale suburbs, and newly gentrifying urban neighborhoods were indeed becoming Democratic as blue-collar areas moved rightward. |
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It was here that he honed his comedy stylings, catering his material to a blue-collar crowd. |
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And right now, working-class and blue-collar whites think the Democratic Party is just implacably against them. |
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The situation is rather acute among blue-collar immigrants who migrate to the United States. |
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The second generation remained largely proletarian, although many moved into the ranks of skilled blue-collar workers. |
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In the past, manufacturers responded to cyclical downturns in sales by making temporary lay-offs, usually concentrated among blue-collar workers. |
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Or, at the least, blue-collar workers who liked their jobs were beneath him. |
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In the sixties, the blue-collar jobs that supported previous generations of urban blacks moved out of town, beyond the reach of public transit. |
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The blue-collar workers in the boroughs aren't allowed to touch stop signs or any street signage. |
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His dad was the average blue-collar worker, a Pittsburgh trademark. |
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It is important to note that almost all blue-collar workers in unionized workplaces are union members in the South Korean auto industry. |
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It seemed like a place that blue-collar guys went after work to have a few pilsners with their bros. |
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He has been, in effect, strip-mining the emotional responses of blue-collar men to the problems his own administration is so intent on causing. |
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Born and raised in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, he grew up in a blue-collar family. |
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Women, older clients, those with high school education and blue-collar workers were more likely to seek assistance. |
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Employees of this other kind are, for example, administrative staff, medical and sanitary staff and auxiliary and blue-collar employees not directly involved in the professional practice of sport. |
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Could it really be that not one former blue-collar worker is qualified to be president? |
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She has demonstrated Mr Obama's weakness with a vital Democratic constituency, the blue-collar worker. |
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We laugh at their fantasies of noble, blue-collar employment as they loll about, eating, drinking and directing the serfs. |
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He then worked as an electronic appliance technician before switching to blue-collar jobs such as waiting on restaurant tables and selling audio equipment. |
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Such regularization also has to be done when an employee's status changes from a blue-collar worker to a white-collar worker. |
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The typical industrial worker is now not the blue-collar worker but the white-collar worker. |
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By opening their ranks to blue-collar workers and intellectuals alike Welsh choruses collectively represent a cross-section of the Welsh population. |
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Against all odds, this blue-collar youth will make it in the boxing ring. |
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Hardly anyone could be more blue collar than Palin, out on the fishing boat with her hunky blue-collar husband, Todd. |
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Quite apart from the rogue male from Ireland, he must deal with the blue-collar slogger, Lava Man, and a champion imported from Uruguay, Invasor. |
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That is all well and good, but we should not think for a minute that shipbuilding is some smokestack blue-collar industry that is obsolete. |
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I think we need to do a program where women should be proud of becoming blue-collar workers. |
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At a time when not much thinking was required of blue-collar workers, their education was not much of a factor. |
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This follows an earlier shift to defined-contribution in the scheme for blue-collar workers. |
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Early retirement may have to be maintained for some categories of blue-collar workers in physically demanding jobs. |
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Most young people follow vocational training courses normally leading to employment as skilled blue-collar workers or white-collar employees. |
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At L'Oreal, white collar workers, blue-collar workers, foremen, and executives are all represented. |
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Data from the Canadian Rural Partnership Research shows that Ontario youth in rural areas are more likely to have blue-collar jobs than their counterparts in urban areas. |
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The value of blue-collar expertise is accepted without question. |
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During the financial year under review sector agreements for the period 1999-2000 were concluded in Belgium for both blue-collar and white-collar staff. |
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In this blue-collar town, the main drag, Packard Avenue, is lined with bars that still advertise beers like Blatz and Andeker. |
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The very few brushes with prejudice I have come across have been with blue-collar workers. |
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His debut album, Greetings from Asbury Park, N. J., released in 1973, sees the blue-collar blusterer hailed as the new Bob Dylan. |
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The Finnish program did not polarized on the issue of the career of blue-collar worker in physically demanding jobs. |
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On TV shows, leading men wore suits and came home from offices, not factories, while the occasional blue-collar protagonists who did appear were treated as buffoons. |
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What they do excel at, however, is what is on display with this album, namely upbeat stompy numbers about blue-collar kids' ordinary lives, loves and dreams. |
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Before he became a successful writer, Fløgstad was a blue-collar worker and a sailor. |
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While a good portion of these new suburbanites were relatively affluent, many were blue-collar workers of more modest means. |
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A second source of antiflow for the blue-collar workers was the type of interaction they had with supervisors. |
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Parks and public libraries were popular places for hanging out, although high rates of illiteracy among blue-collar workers meant that reading did not serve as an escape for many of them. |
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This concerns, in particular: office workers, blue-collar workers, domestics, sportsmen and sportswomen under an employment contract, artists and temporary workers. |
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His image as a man of wealth unable to relate to blue-collar workers made Ohio another test of whether Mr. Romney could expand his support significantly beyond voters who are affluent, moderate and hold college degrees. |
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Steeler fans knew that team was good because they played with a blue-collar attitude. |
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It is more the staff of life for blue-collar natives like Mrs. Brown. |
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When I grew up in the overwhelmingly white blue-collar suburb of Philadelphia known as Levittown, a soft white supremacism was pervasive. |
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Among people in professional and management positions the odds of obtaining employer support are 2.6 times higher than they are for blue-collar workers. |
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Nine first-aid workers, including blue-collar worker Roger Desroches, a Saint-Laurent resident, were later honoured for their fast intervention which saved lives. |
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The blue-collar, stepping-stone, manufacturing jobs are leaving. |
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Most often, steel is mixed up in a class thing: Exposed steel is the building material of choice for blue-collar labourers, best hidden from city professionals. |
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But have they also immobilized its blue-collar workers? |
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Finding worthwhile outlets for one's abilities after retirement may be just what executives need, because retirement generally comes as a much bigger jolt to somebody in management than to a blue-collar or clerical worker. |
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Cops, firemen and blue-collar workers are incredibly hot. |
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South Zanesville is essentially a blue-collar industrial town that sits along the Muskingum River. |
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Even as a tenured professor, she remained proud of her blue-collar values. |
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Since most replicants will be born into wealth, will we see outbreaks of envious blue-collar clone-bashing? |
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After the trial period the length of the notice period for blue-collar workers who were hired for an indefinite time varies from 28 days to 112 days depending on the length of service of the worker. |
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The early steps in a transition from a blue-collar to a green-collar American workforce have been stumbling, some say. |
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