Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Rose Hoffman, 85, a former journalist for a trade union newspaper, wanted specifics.
He said that charge was nonsense, that he had had ideological troubles, but he then worked for the official trade union newspaper in Belgrade.
The report of looting by the Afghan Army, and of desertions, was published in the Soviet trade union newspaper Trud.
After beckoning Cubans to freedom, an editorial in the trade union newspaper Trabajadores stated, the United States was jailing them.
Curtin moved to Cottesloe near Perth in 1917 to become an editor for the Westralian Worker, the official trade union newspaper.
"The result is a muddle," Tatyana Sevastyanova, deputy chief of the city's housing inventory administration, admitted in a report in the trade union newspaper Trud.
He first worked as a cartoonist in 1942 for the Hjemmets Søndag section of the Social-Demokraten, a trade union newspaper (now the Aktuelt).
Returning to Australia he was arrested by military police in Fremantle for speaking in defence of John Curtin, then the editor of a trade union newspaper.
Stavitel'ský robotník was the first Slovak-language trade union newspaper, resulting from the fact that the Hungarian Building Workers Union had a substantial Slovak membership.
After receiving her BA in political science in 1962, Baca-Barragán was recruited to work as an editorial assistant for a trade union newspaper in Washington, DC.
The trade union newspaper Trud said on Sept. 29 that the prices of staple foods like bread, potatoes and other vegetables had risen by up to 18 percent in the last two years.
The results of the investigation were published in the official trade union newspaper Trud in 1968, and in the evening Minsk paper, and broadcast on a youth radio program in 1970.
As the two men became fatigued, their work day was cut, from eight and a half hours last February to four and a half hours now, according to the Soviet trade union newspaper Trud.
Dozen Enterprises Struck According to Trud, the Soviet trade union newspaper, more than a dozen factories and other enterprises were supporting the miners' strike in such cities as Kiselevsk.
True, the President once referred to the Soviet Union as "the evil empire," a commentator in the trade union newspaper Trud noted today, but he has come around to recognizing common interests and supporting peaceful cooperation.
"To me, it is important to preserve the foundations on which stood - and stand - the glory of the Soviet choreographic school," Mr. Grigorovich said in an interview recently published in the trade union newspaper Trud.
Responding to claims about anti-Semitism in the foreign media, Glos Pracy, the trade union newspaper, wrote that American media was in no position to criticize Poland since their country itself was guilty of "total tolerance of anti-Semitism."
In an interview in the Soviet trade union newspaper Trud, Mrs. Gorbachev described how her family had deliberately walked in view of naval vessels off the shore of their Crimean villa so people could see they were alive and well.
As a leader of the General Federation of Belgian Labour (FGTB) in Liège, Renard made this statement for the trade union newspaper La Wallonie on 26 July, published two days later by Le Soir:
Interviewed in the trade union newspaper Trud, Pavlov claimed that (unnamed) banks in Switzerland, Austria and Canada had co-operated with non-governmental Soviet organizations to buy large-denomination rouble notes in massive quantities on the black market, and had been smuggling them out of the country.
He worked as a trade union organiser for the Australian Journalists' Association and as part-time editor of The Australian Worker newspaper of the AWU - a union covering shearers, drovers, and other rural workers - the oldest trade union newspaper in Australia (1964).
On that day, the trade union newspaper, Die Tribune, defended a decree by the East German Council of Ministers that raised production quotas in industry and construction by at least 10 percent, according to a history of the German Democratic Republic by Martin McCauley, a British historian.