Word: scopes
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Ages. It could even draw on guest lectures from a few of the critics on this side of the river, and might profitably include a look at literary works concerning business, perhaps even The Merchant of Venice and Death of a Salesman. Obviously, this course would be larger in scope than either the existing half-course (unrequired) in Business History or the full course on Business in American Society...
...just that. As House Minority Leader Joseph Martin says, "Congress could turn the study into a witch hunt," and thus confuse instead of clarify the issues. But the main reason that Congress should not make the study, say many Congressmen, is that the project has too broad a scope for any of the regular congressional committees to handle...
...abandoned Donegani's one-man rule for a U.S.-style line-and-staff system, authorized plant managers to run the works on the spot, set up executive committees in Milan to supervise the major decisions and divisions. On the technical side he held a lighter rein, giving considerable scope to Engineer Perio Giustiniani. a fellow Tuscan who has served with Faina as co-president since...
...hands of the negotiators, it would be well to remember that something quite extraordinary and unprecedented occurred in the United Nations General Assembly during debates on the Israeli-French-British attack: the creation of a special U.N. Emergency Force, the first truly international police force in history. Its scope, of course, was and still is limited; but its significance, if it succeeds in Sinai and Suez, is broad indeed. As the armed representatives of the will of the U.N., the few thousand soldiers now in Egypt's desert could become the nucleus of a permanent U.N. Police Force--a force...
...economic balance sheet drawn up by the Committee began with the cheery news that in 1956 Russia had increased production of capital goods 11% and that of consumer goods 9%. "An idea of the scope of Soviet industrial production," crowed Pravda, "can be gained from the fact that by the end of 1956 the Soviet Union will have smelted 49 million tons of steel, mined about 430 million tons of coal, produced 84 million tons of oil, and generated 192 billion kw-h of electricity...