Word: employables
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...metaphor of the New England "errand run into the wilderness"; it fits the man almost as well as his material. Miller himself used the phrase to describe the Messianic impulse which characterized colonial America. His friends and colleagues, contributors to this memorial issue of The Harvard Review, employ it to catch something of the impression he made...
...national interest and the circumstances peculiar to each situation as it arises." This approach echoed the pragmatism Mann has been preaching since he took over the Latin America job in January. But now the tone seemed somewhat firmer in its suggestion that the Johnson Administration expects to employ greater flexibility and possibly more muscle in U.S. dealings in Latin America...
...industry's united front against the unions' wage demands last year. But almost all political factions support the company because it is so important to the economy. On the instep of the Italian boot, IRI is now completing a $400 million steel plant for Italsider that will employ 45,000 and help to fulfill a legal requirement that IRI devote 40% of its investments to industrializing Italy's south...
Such investments in productivity have actually been reducing the number of jobs in steel and some other industries, but many companies are expanding in a way that will create employment. A Chrysler assembly plant soon to be built in Belvidere, III., will employ up to 5,000, and General Motors' new plant at Fremont, Calif., has places for 4,100. These projects will mean new orders and more jobs in such industries as machine tools, building equipment, office equipment, steel, glass and paint. To the delight of construction contractors, some firms are also brushing up their corporate images...
...this point the Bulldogs began to employ the strategy which had throttled the Crimson at New Haven last month They positioned two guards and a forward near the mid-court stripe and froze the ball until Harvard was forced into a man-to-man defense. Then the Elis would take turns running in toward the basket until one of them could shake off his defender, take a pass, and make an easy layup...