a
major railroad
station in
Chicago,
Illinois, USA,
completed on construction in 1925. More generically, the name refers to a
main train
station servicing more than one railroad or
transport company and has been used in a number of large cities throughout the Unites
States, such as
Chicago,
Los Angeles and
New York.
the name of a
process which uses live people and is only
run in railroad
terminals, large bus
terminals and airports. The commands are "Tell me something you really know about that person," and "What would you permit that person to know about you?" This
process takes its name from the large railroad
terminal in
Washington,
DC -Ability Major 6 [ca. early September 19551. a large
subway train
station in
New York City.
a
process which was
developed by
Ron in the mid-1950s when he was in
Washington,
DC. It was named after Union
Station, a large railroad
station there. For more
information on this
process, see
R2-46 in
Ability Major 6,
Basic Processes, in
Technical Bulletins Volume
III.
a
process which was
developed by
Ron in the mid-1950s when he was in
Washington,
DC. It was named after Union
Station, a large railroad
station there. For more
information on this
process, see
R2-46 in
Ability Major 6, "
Basic Processes," in
Technical Bulletins Volume
III.