Search Details

Word: product (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...Francisco company, which runs lumber, tanker and mining operations. Coleman plans to keep Pacific Coast separate from his Chicago jukebox and vending-machine business, but some of Pacific Coast's silver dollars may be dropped in the automatic coin machines that Coleman regards as a top growth product...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Personal File: May 19, 1961 | 5/19/1961 | See Source »

William S. Ginn, 45. former G.E. vice president and the highest G.E. officer to be indicted (he got 30 days in jail), became assistant to the president of Philadelphia's Baldwin-Lima-Hamilton Co., in charge of new-product research. He obviously took a hefty pay cut from his former G.E. salary of $125,000, since Baldwin's President McClure Kelley himself gets a mere $76,200. Lewis J. Burger, 49, a G.E. division manager before he went off to jail, was elected president of LeTourneau Westinghouse Co., a subsidiary of Westinghouse Air Brake Co. that makes construction...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business Ethics: The Road Back | 5/19/1961 | See Source »

...unfair for the communities to send teachers questing for excellence, with a yoicks and a tally ho and a drink at the end. . . In the effort to do their work better than they think they can, people acquire competence; and excellence is nothing more than the most precious by-product in the large-scale production of competence...

Author: By Michael S. Lottman, | Title: How Not to Discuss The Schools | 5/19/1961 | See Source »

...rationality--and rewards him accordingly," she proclaims. "Success depends on the objective value of work." Her praise of the entrepreneur is sometimes quite staggering: he is a man who "takes pride in his work and in the value of his work and in the value of his product--who drives himself with inexhaustible energy and limitless ambition to do better and still better and ever better--who is willing to bear penalties for his mistakes and expects rewards for his achievements--who looks at the universe with the fearless eagerness of a child, knowing it to be intelligible--who demands...

Author: By Frederic L. Ballard jr., | Title: Naivete, Idealism Mar Ayn Rand's Philosophy | 5/19/1961 | See Source »

...which her "intellectual Renaissance" must be brought about--"that emotions are not tools of cognition" and that "no man has the right to initiate the use of physical force against others." The first of these is fully consistent with the basic axioms of "objectivism." The second is presumably a product of Miss Rand's high opinion of personal freedom, but it seems strange that men should be able to cut one another's throats economically but not physically...

Author: By Frederic L. Ballard jr., | Title: Naivete, Idealism Mar Ayn Rand's Philosophy | 5/19/1961 | See Source »

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