Word: ownership
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Perhaps the editors decided that they could compensate for the informal tone of all the previous articles by Don Villarejo's heavily documented (17 tables) commentary on "Stock Ownership and the Control of Corporations." Part II of Villarejo's thesis (one more segment to go) is a well-assembled demolition of People's Capitalism. Making a point that the left-wing economist Victor Perlo made before him in an attack on Kuznets, Villarejo avoids the biases of Perlo's data and the pitfalls of his oratory. The only author in the present issue who is writing from a posture...
Councilor Alfred E. Vellucci made by far the most noise yesterday at a City Council meeting where several Councilors tried to assert a monopoly ownership of the voice of the people Cambridge. It was the second to last meeting before the election next Tuesday...
...have never," Hindus writes, "encountered any young Soviet citizens, workers or intellectuals, who question collective ownership of the 'means of production.' They accept the Soviet economy without reservations, and I am certain they would battle against any movement to overthrow it. They know nothing else, and to them the term 'capitalism' spells depravity and damnation." They fight only to buy more books, to write about day to day problems rather than about the romance of building Socialism, and to wear lipstick and play jazz...
...Seized by the U.S. Government as German property during World War II, General Aniline & Film Corp. (chemicals, dyes, Ansco Film) has handicaps few U.S. corporations can match: its ownership has been the subject of a 13-year legal battle between the Government and a Swiss holding company, and its board changes hands each time the White House does. Result: profits ($7.2 million last year) are way off the chemical industry's pace. To remedy this, Aniline's new, Kennedy-appointed board last week chose as chairman and chief executive officer U.S. Industries Chairman John I Snyder...
...power are prepared to cooperate in working out means whereby productivity can be increased and its benefits more widely distributed. So I put high on the list of public policy positive efforts to see that the benefits of growth be spread widely among more and more people-through jobs, ownership, opportunity. Obviously, there is need for governments to provide the basic facilities and services. To do this in adequate measures will strain their human and financial resources. It seems sensible, therefore, to give the greatest scope to private initiative and capital in all fields which are not necessarily...