text stringlengths 1 3.04k |
|---|
Sure. Where they're negotiating. In the company office. We'll go up there and picket the place. |
Come on, Esperanza how about it? We got to. |
No. No. I can't. If Ramn ever found me on a picket line ... |
He can't drink this milk. It'll make him sick. He's on a formula. I was a fool! I shouldn't have kept him with me. |
Don't you worry. We'll get some action. |
It's all set. Consuelo's squad can take they day off tomorrow. We're taking over. |
Good. Come in, we'll work it out. Sit down, sit down. |
So they had a little taste of what its like to be a woman ... and they run away. |
With Ramn it's ... pride. I spoke out of the bitterness in me. And he was hurt. |
Are you sick, Mama? |
No, Estellita. |
Are you sad? Are we going to church? For your confession? |
Later. When I finish the ironing. |
Mama, can I put the candles ... |
Hush... not a word about the cake, hear? |
Why are they singing, Mama? |
They are singing for me. |
Can we light the candles now? On the cake? |
Yes. We will light the candles. |
Hear you had a little trouble, Quintero. Defective fuse? Well, you're all in one piece. So what's the beef? |
You know the beef. This new rule of yours, that we work alone. We're taking it up with the Super. |
Super's busy with your Negotiatin' Committee. |
So much the better. |
Now wait a minute. Super's the one made the rule. He ain't gonna give you no helper. |
He will if he wants us to go on blasting. |
Foreman wants to get the ore out. Miner wants to get his brothers out. In one piece. |
You work alone, savvy? You can't handle the job, I'll find someone who can. |
Who? A scab? |
An American. |
I checked the drift just before he blasted. It was all clear ... The man must have been asleep or something. |
You weren't even there. You were back at the station. Kalinsky told me ... |
You're a liar, Pancho. A nogood, dirty ... |
Take a drink. Calm down! |
I say we gotta take action. Now. |
Now why don't you let these gentlemen pass? Don't you know who's in that car? |
It's the paymaster from Moscow with our gold. |
No, no, it's the president of the company himself come all the way out here to make Jenkins general manager. So why you acting so mean? |
Jenkins ain't no boss. Mean we're gonna let people like Jenkins stay here? |
You can't send him back to Oklahoma. It'd be inhumane. |
How goes it? |
It never ends. |
Three hours! Just to heat enough water to wash this stuff! I tell you something. If this strike is ever settled which I doubt I don't go back to work unless the company installs hot running water for us. It should've been a union demand from the beginning. |
Yeah. |
It's like Charley Vidal says there's two kinds of slavery, wage slavery and domestic slavery. The Woman Question, he calls it. |
The woman question? |
Question, question the problem, what to do about 'em. |
So? What does he want to do about 'em? |
He says give 'em equality. Equality in jobs, equality in the home. Also sex equality. |
What do you mean sex equality? |
You know ... What's good for the goose is good for the gander. |
Mornin'. |
How's it going? |
Well, those new fellows you hired from out of town we brought 'em up here in a truck this morning, but they took one look at that picket line and turned tail. |
Not so sure about that. Letter of the Law, you know. All the injunction says is no picketing by miners. |
Whose side are you on anyway? |
Now don't get excited, Mr. Alexander. They'll scatter like a covey of quail. |
Well? |
I've tried everything but shootin' 'em down. |
You haven't tried locking them up! |
You want 'em all arrested? |
No, just the ring leaders. The fireeaters. And the ones with big families ... Barton where's that boy? |
Got any more ideas? |
I don't make policy. |
I told you it would happen. It's bound to happen when a man works alone! |
Why didn't you give a warning signal? |
Your foreman says that's a foreman's job. |
Want to go up to your office, Mr. Alexander? |
Naturally. You think I parked here for a cup of coffee? |
You're welcome to one. |
No thanks. |
The men would like to know who this gentleman is. |
That's none of their affair. |
I mean it. I know your work record. You were in line for foreman when this trouble started did you know that? You had a real future with this company, but you let those Reds stir you up. And now they'll sell you down the river. Why don't you wake up, Ray? That's your name, isn't it, Ray? |
No. My name is Quintero. Mister Quintero. |
Are you going to let us pass or do I have to call the Sheriff? |
There's nothing stopping you. |
Hi. |
Hi. |
You look good. |
You look good yourself. |
I thought you were never going to call me. |
You did? |
I really wanted you to call me, and I thought you were never going to |
You could have called me |
No way. No way I was going to be the first woman you went out with after... There is no percentage whatsoever in being the first woman anyone goes out with after... |
You <u>are</u> the first woman I'm going out with. |
Oh. |
So whatdya say? I'll get the check, and I'll call you in eight months. |
We can't finish the job. She's on her sixth painter, now she's thinking maybe she wants the fireplace rebricked |
I know her pretty well. Maybe I could call her |
I've already solved it. I've hired a hit man. |
Is he there? |
No. After he was born, every time we started to make love, he would cry. He had an uncanny sense of timing. We really shouldn't do anything here anyway. |
Absolutely. Right. |
He's ten. |
He's good at it. |
I read an article about this ... |
I read the same article... |
It takes time |
Absolutely. When I come back, maybe the two of us should spend some time together, on our own. What do you think? |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.