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Dammit......
Vic Smith wrote: On Tue, 17 Jul 2007 12:28:07 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: I went in and the cheapest I saw was Canadian Ace. When we got to the boat we started putting the beer and ice in the cooler. "What the hell!! Canadian Ace?!?!?" he says. "You told me to get cheap beer," says I. He just looked at me and shook his head. --Vic "Canadian Ace"? I imagine Billy Mitchell is rolling in his grave...... |
Dammit......
"HK" wrote in message ... Schaefer...the one beer to have when you want to belch up beer breath. I drank Piels for a while when I drank beer because I liked Bert and Harry Piel, aka Bob Elliot and Ray Goulding. Best commercials ever. Among the worst beers ever. One summer while in college my father got me a job on the loading dock at Hulls' Export Beer in New Haven. I loaded kegs and cases of bottles onto trucks all day long. Work rules required a cold keg on the dock at all times to "refresh" the grunts who did the loading. I'm afraid those days are long, long gone. http://tinyurl.com/395jnv Those were the days. I earned enough in the summer to just about cover the next year's tuition, books and room and board, thanks to the American union movement! Anybody nostalgic for an old brewery can always take the tour of what they claim is the oldest working brewery in North America. I grew up one city block from this place. http://www.keiths.ca/k_brewery/k_brewery_index.htm# |
Dammit......
On Tue, 17 Jul 2007 14:48:53 -0400, HK wrote:
Here's a really old Piels beer commercial: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26HtmV0DmRU It's good. For some reason it reminds me of Maypo instead of beer. They got more sophisticated (!) as the years passed, but still kept to the format. I had two good summer jobs thanks to the Teamsters, and another good one thanks to the Steamfitters and Boilermakers Unions. I knew a little bit about welding before that summer, but by the time the summer was over, I was working right alongside journeymen, refurbishing steam boilers at the now defunct Bigelow Boiler factory. Now that was a manly man's job! The place was ancient; it had built steam locomotives earlier in its history. WARNING: Long Winded, No Boats I was running heavy brake press and shear crews at the IH bulldozer plants in Chicago (the old McCormack works) and Melrose Park. Got to arguing over safety and piecework issues with my foreman and the division foreman. Shears repeating, screwed on averages, etc. A couple years back I had seen one guy I was friendly with get his fingers cut off by a small press that repeated. He came walking up to me in shock holding his good hand over the finger stumps, mouthing "Vic, Vic." We got him laid down and hauled off and as we were looking for the glove with his fingers the f**cking machine's ram was still pumping up and down. I was looking before I saw the kid because I've got ears for that, and a repeating shear is way out of place. They couldn't reattach his fingers. I was running 8-torch Linde gas cutters then. Flash forward a couple years and I'm working in a different department on the heavy bangers. One day I'm cutting 1" thick steel pieces and the clamps and shear come down with no pedal action by me. Steel slaps but luckily neither me or my helper get our hands mangled. I shut it down and told the foreman to get maintenance to fix the repeat. This is about the 3rd time it's happened in a week. He wants me to keep working it until maintenance comes. "What, and lose my fingers like Raphael?" He says, "He was using his head on the switch." Meaning pushing pieces faster by not using both hands on the widely spaced switches. I let him know the best I could express it that I was actually there and was he full of sh*t. This SOB had already negligently let an uncoordinated kid get his arm mangled to uselessness in a Webb roller. I had warned him the kid couldn't even operate a worksaver safely. Anyway, it was all downhill and after I stood toe-to-toe with the general foreman cussing each other out and spraying each other with spittle I knew I had to get out. That one ended with the ahole general accusing me of threatening him - a firing offense. A small crowd had gathered and I heard from it steward Gainsworth's soft but penetrating voice tell the general "He didn't threaten you. I heard everything said here." Anyway, I knew I'd get fired by these jokers if I had a flat and was a minute late, so I decided to get out. I had a kid coming and needed to keep my insurance. I got a contract book from Gainsworth and saw that a vet would be granted leave of absence to attend college, but there was language about "at the foreman's discretion." After my shift I went to the front office to ask personnel how they interpreted that. The personnel guy said "You want to go to school, you go to school. Don't matter what the foreman wants." So within a week I was enrolled and had the paperwork done with the front office. Had to pay a bit over $400 month for the insurance but hey, the GI bill money almost covered that. I had a job to come back to if I needed it, and insurance for my family. Anyway, I was a good boy for the foreman for the week or so left. Just goaded and insulted him whenever I got the opportunity. I figured he knew I was leaving. After all, me and my helper produced more bends and cuts than the other 2 shifts combined. He must know who he was going to steal from and endanger next, right?. My next to last night my helper still hadn't heard who he'd be working with. I saw the foreman walking by and yelled at him, "Hey Tony! Who's Hines gonna be working with on Monday?" He says, "What are you talking about?" They hadn't even told him I was leaving! So I explained, "Tony, I'm going to college on a leave of absence. Tomorrow's my last day." He says "Bull****," storms away to his office and gets on the phone. I could see it all through the big window. He's on the phone about a minute, his arm goes all the way up and he SLAMS it down on the receiver. Sweet, sweet, sweet. Never said another word to that c*cks*cker. I came back 6 months later to a different department, but it was tough working full time and school full time, so I quit IH after doing 6 more months. Got a 4 hours a day PT job fueling, jockeying and washing tractors and trailers at UPS, so I was a Teamster for almost 4 years. Made almost as much pushing a brush there for 20 hours than I made lifting 90 tons of steel at IH in 40 hours. The unions were good to me. Except for those 2 pricks I never had problems with management either. Guys like them are the reason there's unions. They'll lie and steal you blind, and get you killed for a buck. Of course then I became a "professional" and soon made 5 times as much. The downside to that was listening to overpaid lazy geeks with ties whining about unions. Like being around ballerinas all day, for Christ's sake. --Vic |
Dammit......
Vic Smith wrote:
On Tue, 17 Jul 2007 14:48:53 -0400, HK wrote: Here's a really old Piels beer commercial: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26HtmV0DmRU It's good. For some reason it reminds me of Maypo instead of beer. They got more sophisticated (!) as the years passed, but still kept to the format. I had two good summer jobs thanks to the Teamsters, and another good one thanks to the Steamfitters and Boilermakers Unions. I knew a little bit about welding before that summer, but by the time the summer was over, I was working right alongside journeymen, refurbishing steam boilers at the now defunct Bigelow Boiler factory. Now that was a manly man's job! The place was ancient; it had built steam locomotives earlier in its history. WARNING: Long Winded, No Boats I was running heavy brake press and shear crews at the IH bulldozer plants in Chicago (the old McCormack works) and Melrose Park. Got to arguing over safety and piecework issues with my foreman and the division foreman. Shears repeating, screwed on averages, etc. A couple years back I had seen one guy I was friendly with get his fingers cut off by a small press that repeated. He came walking up to me in shock holding his good hand over the finger stumps, mouthing "Vic, Vic." We got him laid down and hauled off and as we were looking for the glove with his fingers the f**cking machine's ram was still pumping up and down. I was looking before I saw the kid because I've got ears for that, and a repeating shear is way out of place. They couldn't reattach his fingers. I was running 8-torch Linde gas cutters then. Flash forward a couple years and I'm working in a different department on the heavy bangers. One day I'm cutting 1" thick steel pieces and the clamps and shear come down with no pedal action by me. Steel slaps but luckily neither me or my helper get our hands mangled. I shut it down and told the foreman to get maintenance to fix the repeat. This is about the 3rd time it's happened in a week. He wants me to keep working it until maintenance comes. "What, and lose my fingers like Raphael?" He says, "He was using his head on the switch." Meaning pushing pieces faster by not using both hands on the widely spaced switches. I let him know the best I could express it that I was actually there and was he full of sh*t. This SOB had already negligently let an uncoordinated kid get his arm mangled to uselessness in a Webb roller. I had warned him the kid couldn't even operate a worksaver safely. Anyway, it was all downhill and after I stood toe-to-toe with the general foreman cussing each other out and spraying each other with spittle I knew I had to get out. That one ended with the ahole general accusing me of threatening him - a firing offense. A small crowd had gathered and I heard from it steward Gainsworth's soft but penetrating voice tell the general "He didn't threaten you. I heard everything said here." Anyway, I knew I'd get fired by these jokers if I had a flat and was a minute late, so I decided to get out. I had a kid coming and needed to keep my insurance. I got a contract book from Gainsworth and saw that a vet would be granted leave of absence to attend college, but there was language about "at the foreman's discretion." After my shift I went to the front office to ask personnel how they interpreted that. The personnel guy said "You want to go to school, you go to school. Don't matter what the foreman wants." So within a week I was enrolled and had the paperwork done with the front office. Had to pay a bit over $400 month for the insurance but hey, the GI bill money almost covered that. I had a job to come back to if I needed it, and insurance for my family. Anyway, I was a good boy for the foreman for the week or so left. Just goaded and insulted him whenever I got the opportunity. I figured he knew I was leaving. After all, me and my helper produced more bends and cuts than the other 2 shifts combined. He must know who he was going to steal from and endanger next, right?. My next to last night my helper still hadn't heard who he'd be working with. I saw the foreman walking by and yelled at him, "Hey Tony! Who's Hines gonna be working with on Monday?" He says, "What are you talking about?" They hadn't even told him I was leaving! So I explained, "Tony, I'm going to college on a leave of absence. Tomorrow's my last day." He says "Bull****," storms away to his office and gets on the phone. I could see it all through the big window. He's on the phone about a minute, his arm goes all the way up and he SLAMS it down on the receiver. Sweet, sweet, sweet. Never said another word to that c*cks*cker. I came back 6 months later to a different department, but it was tough working full time and school full time, so I quit IH after doing 6 more months. Got a 4 hours a day PT job fueling, jockeying and washing tractors and trailers at UPS, so I was a Teamster for almost 4 years. Made almost as much pushing a brush there for 20 hours than I made lifting 90 tons of steel at IH in 40 hours. The unions were good to me. Except for those 2 pricks I never had problems with management either. Guys like them are the reason there's unions. They'll lie and steal you blind, and get you killed for a buck. Of course then I became a "professional" and soon made 5 times as much. The downside to that was listening to overpaid lazy geeks with ties whining about unions. Like being around ballerinas all day, for Christ's sake. --Vic Great read...thanks! |
Dammit......
"Vic Smith" wrote in message ... snip... The unions were good to me. Except for those 2 pricks I never had problems with management either. *Guys like them are the reason there's unions*. They'll lie and steal you blind, and get you killed for a buck. snip --Vic Bingo! If everyone was treated fairly & with respect why would they willingly pay those union dues year after year. (not counting a few cases where a particular union may hold a business hostage to enrich it's members above their fair value) |
Dammit......
"Don White" wrote in message ... "Vic Smith" wrote in message ... snip... The unions were good to me. Except for those 2 pricks I never had problems with management either. *Guys like them are the reason there's unions*. They'll lie and steal you blind, and get you killed for a buck. snip --Vic Bingo! If everyone was treated fairly & with respect why would they willingly pay those union dues year after year. (not counting a few cases where a particular union may hold a business hostage to enrich it's members above their fair value) Stop living in the 1920s Don. Unions cause mediocrity...........everyone receives the same pay increase, despite their abilities and contributions. |
Dammit......
JimH wrote:
"Don White" wrote in message ... "Vic Smith" wrote in message ... snip... The unions were good to me. Except for those 2 pricks I never had problems with management either. *Guys like them are the reason there's unions*. They'll lie and steal you blind, and get you killed for a buck. snip --Vic Bingo! If everyone was treated fairly & with respect why would they willingly pay those union dues year after year. (not counting a few cases where a particular union may hold a business hostage to enrich it's members above their fair value) Stop living in the 1920s Don. Unions cause mediocrity...........everyone receives the same pay increase, despite their abilities and contributions. Unions created the lower middle class in this country, and made a future possible for tens of millions of working Americans and their children and grandchildren. |
Dammit......
HK wrote:
JimH wrote: "Don White" wrote in message ... "Vic Smith" wrote in message ... snip... The unions were good to me. Except for those 2 pricks I never had problems with management either. *Guys like them are the reason there's unions*. They'll lie and steal you blind, and get you killed for a buck. snip --Vic Bingo! If everyone was treated fairly & with respect why would they willingly pay those union dues year after year. (not counting a few cases where a particular union may hold a business hostage to enrich it's members above their fair value) Stop living in the 1920s Don. Unions cause mediocrity...........everyone receives the same pay increase, despite their abilities and contributions. Unions created the lower middle class in this country, and made a future possible for tens of millions of working Americans and their children and grandchildren. If *any* of that is true, at least you correctly posted it in past tense. Dan |
Dammit......
"HK" wrote in message ... JimH wrote: "Don White" wrote in message ... "Vic Smith" wrote in message ... snip... The unions were good to me. Except for those 2 pricks I never had problems with management either. *Guys like them are the reason there's unions*. They'll lie and steal you blind, and get you killed for a buck. snip --Vic Bingo! If everyone was treated fairly & with respect why would they willingly pay those union dues year after year. (not counting a few cases where a particular union may hold a business hostage to enrich it's members above their fair value) Stop living in the 1920s Don. Unions cause mediocrity...........everyone receives the same pay increase, despite their abilities and contributions. Unions created the lower middle class in this country, and made a future possible for tens of millions of working Americans and their children and grandchildren. Agreed as you posted in past tense. In todays world unions are no longer needed though. ;-) |
Dammit......
JimH wrote:
"HK" wrote in message ... JimH wrote: "Don White" wrote in message ... "Vic Smith" wrote in message ... snip... The unions were good to me. Except for those 2 pricks I never had problems with management either. *Guys like them are the reason there's unions*. They'll lie and steal you blind, and get you killed for a buck. snip --Vic Bingo! If everyone was treated fairly & with respect why would they willingly pay those union dues year after year. (not counting a few cases where a particular union may hold a business hostage to enrich it's members above their fair value) Stop living in the 1920s Don. Unions cause mediocrity...........everyone receives the same pay increase, despite their abilities and contributions. Unions created the lower middle class in this country, and made a future possible for tens of millions of working Americans and their children and grandchildren. Agreed as you posted in past tense. In todays world unions are no longer needed though. ;-) That's right...everyone should put their faith in their corporate employer, who, without unions, can buttfu*k you mercilessly while the Bush Admin cheers and lets your jobs be exported to China. |
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