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Word: firemanning (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...engine was damaged earlier this year as it skidded around a corner on the way to a fire. The driver and another fireman were seriously injured in the crash, but the engine suffered only body damage. The City Council voted on Monday to send the machine to its manufacturer--the Pirsch Company in Kenosha--for repairs...

Author: By Ernest A. Ostro, | Title: City Offers Students from Midwest Free Journey Home in Fire Engine | 12/16/1955 | See Source »

Crane expects the fire departments of cities en route to "give the pumper the old visiting fireman treatment, brass bands and all. During night stopovers, the engine will be parked in local firehouses, ready for anything...

Author: By Ernest A. Ostro, | Title: City Offers Students from Midwest Free Journey Home in Fire Engine | 12/16/1955 | See Source »

...security measures to keep the engine--pumper number two--under lock and key. Police cordons were set up around the fire station on Portland St. last night to keep photographers and reporters away. The fire station's personnel barricaded themselves behind locked doors and windows. "Nobody gets in," one fireman said...

Author: By Ernest A. Ostro, | Title: Cambridge Fire Engine to Migrate West | 12/14/1955 | See Source »

...serene little Mad River suddenly smashed through the town and isolated it for two days. In Farmington, Conn., little Patricia Ann Bechard drowned when a rescue boat capsized while her horrified mother, Mrs. Leon Bechard, clung to her baby daughter and watched helplessly. A Farmington fireman lashed five-year-old Linda Bartolomeo to a tree, was washed into the floodwaters himself, and later rescued. Red Cross officials found the child safe, 30 hours later. In Seymour, Conn, and Woonsocket, R.I., the floodwaters ripped through cemeteries, uprooted coffins and sent them bobbing downstream...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WEATHER: The Tempest | 8/29/1955 | See Source »

...with a Roman toga draped around his aldermanic figure, South Dakota's Republican Senator Karl Mundt and his wife appeared as Wild Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane, Alabama's Democratic Senator John Sparkman (his party's 1952 nominee for Vice President) showed up disguised as a fireman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Laugh, Clown, Laugh | 4/4/1955 | See Source »

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