Word: differently
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...whose implications it does not seem to grasp. After almost a year spent in getting cards by the New Deal, the nation has a right to ask the administration's answer to a few rather fundamental questions. What does the "self-government" of industry mean, and how does it differ from the self-government which preceded Mr. Roosevelt's inauguration? How does it square with Senator Wagner's "Industrial democracy"? What does "industrial democracy" mean if we are to have no regular democratic organization of labor, and not even the "privilege" of collective bargaining? Who will police the codes? What...
...Committee announced that the 1934 Album would differ in no essentials from last year's album, and that the possibility of inserting new features depended entirely on the number of subscriptions which could be guaranteed at an early date...
...method of instruction or the general approach to the subject at Harvard differed sufficiently from that used in preparatory schools, there might be some reason for requiring men who have already had their quota of science in school to take a course in college. In some other fields this is the case. But the elementary science courses differ from school courses only in being slightly more intensive...
...does the R. F. C. evade in purchasing capital notes, but the New Deal, expressing itself in laws of the U. S. and New York State, specifically gives banks a way to get around the constitution of the sovereign State of New York. Capital notes differ in legal theory from preferred stock but are issued, just like preferred stock, to get additional capital without subjecting the owner thereof to double liability. Said the advertisement in which the Manufacturers Trust announced its intention of selling capital notes: "Under the Constitution of the State of New York such preferred stock cannot...
...normal budget in certainly getting drastic treatment. As for the emergency budget, this involves a mandate from Congress to do specific things to aid the national emergency. Here the government officials themselves differ as to the wisdom of the many millions being spent but they have no discretion. The President has taken the position that he must carry out the wishes of Congress. Public opinion, however, may at any time become aroused as to the vast expenditures and demand their diminution. There are no signs of it yet, for there is scarcely a state or section which isn't after...