Word: sharing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...wishes to receive a share of the money, the University will have to apply to the Massachusetts Board of Collegiate Authority which has been named to administer the grants in Massachusetts...
...other allies. But at least a few are beginning to believe that the idea-surface ships armed with Polaris weapons and manned by mixed crews from various NATO nations-just might work.* No one has any other practical or even impractical plan to give Europe a greater share in the use of the Bomb. From the rational French viewpoint, the "sharing" provided by MLF would be an illusion, since the U.S. would still retain control of the missiles. But Lyndon Johnson has hinted that this control might be transferred to the Europeans -if and when Europe truly unites...
...home. Groaned one old man: "I used to be awakened each morning by the murmuring river waters. Now it is the dawn Cairo express from Aswan thundering in my ears." In Nubia, polygamous husbands had separate houses for each wife; at Kom Ombo, a man's wives must share his house, and many husbands, dismayed by the prospect, have divorced all wives save one. But a man who risked keeping both his wives concedes that the arrangement has advantages. "Here I do not have to move from house to house. I go one night to one room, the next...
Mexico's revolution finally caught up last week with a promise made long ago to industrial workers. The constitution written in 1917 calls for capital to share its profits with labor. The rhetoric was impressive, but the constitution was vague on precisely how to go about it. Over the years, labor and management could never agree on a plan. In 1961 Mexico's Congress approved a constitutional amendment-later ratified by a majority of Mexico's 29 states-giving the government power to force a settlement. Now outgoing President Adolfo López Mateos has signed...
Under the plan, a committee composed equally of management, labor and government representatives will determine what share of each company's profits should be passed on to the workers. Some 80% of Mexico's nonagricultural industries, both local and foreign owned, will be affected-but the result will not be a dramatic switch away from capitalism. Mexico has too many unemployed for employees to have the upper hand; even a regime that proclaims itself revolutionary has no desire to interfere too much with a profitable economy. The complex profit-sharing formula takes into account productive capacity, stockholder dividends...