|
Recognizing supporter of free enterprise
|
The Steinman family, owners of the Lancaster New Era,
Intelligencer Journal and Sunday News, was honored Tuesday by the
Newcomen Society of the United States for its contributions to the
free enterprise system in this country. Leighton A. Wildrick, center,
president and chief executive officer of the Newcomen Society,
presented the award to, from left to right, Hale Ansberry Krasne,
Caroline Nunan Hill, Beverly Randolph Steinman and Caroline Steinman
Nunan, all board members of Lancaster News...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
A bastion of free enterprise
Intelligencer Journal Lancaster, PA
; The Steinman family, owners of the Intelligencer Journal, Lancaster New Era and Sunday News, was honored Tuesday by the Newcomen Society of the United States for its contributions to the free enterprise system in this country ...
|
|
Recognizing supporter of free enterprise
Lancaster New Era Lancaster, PA
; The Steinman family, owners of the Lancaster New Era, Intelligencer Journal and Sunday News, was honored Tuesday by the Newcomen Society of the United States for its contributions to the free enterprise system in this country ...
|
|
DECA, competition, free enterprise economics
Michigan Citizen
; Odette Duke Michigan Citizen 12-24-1994 DECA, competition, free enterprise economics. Throughout the United States, over 200,000 members of the National DECA Association are preparing for the competitive events competitions. The purpose of these competitions are to contribute to the development of
|
|
DECA: Association competition, free enterprise economics
Michigan Chronicle
; Odette Duke Michigan Chronicle 12-20-1994 DECA: Association competition, free enterprise economics. Throughout the United States, more than 200,000 members of the National DECA Association are preparing for the competitive events competitions. The purpose of the competitions is to contribute to the
|
|
FREE ENTERPRISE
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
; FREE ENTERPRISE We have too many government controls Sunday, October 29, 2000 Imagine a free economy -- in some other country. Imagine that country's businesses are deregulated, and thus the world's best and brightest go there to develop their products. Would our government's attempts to segment
|
|
SIFE team to compete.(Strictly Business)(Students in Free Enterprise )(Brief Article)
Mississippi Business Journal
; LORMAN -- The Alcorn State University Students in Free Enterprise (SIFE) team is preparing to compete in the 2005 SIFE Regional Competition and Career Opportunity Fair. The event, which will feature 20 SIFE teams, will be held April 8, 2005, in New Orleans. SIFE encourages students to take what
|
|
Jennings A. Jones Champion Of Free Enterprise
Tennessee TRIBUNE, The
; ... II, Jones returned home to chair the city's first planning commission. Utilizing his ability to fly a plane, he drew the first maps of Murfreesboro's subdivisions and recommended where new major roads should be built. He was later appointed to the Tennessee ...
|
|
Student attitudes toward regulation, politics, and free enterprise.
Journal of Legal, Ethical and Regulatory Issues
; ABSTRACT What determines the attitudes that students have toward governmental agencies, regulatory bodies, and political systems? This paper begins with a review of the historical foundations of today's economic beliefs concerning the role of government. Survey data is then used to explore
|
|
Free Enterprise.
The Women's Review of Books
; the loss, the forgettingof resistanceis a terrible thing. No Telephone to Heaven WHO HAS EVER HEARD of Annie Christmas, Mary Shadd Carey, Mary Ellen Pleasant? asks the narrator of Free Enterprise, Michelle Cliff's third novel. All nineteenth-century comrades in the struggle for Black liberation,
|
|
Clarke, UD teams fare well at events; Students succeed in competitions involving concepts of free enterprise
Telegraph - Herald (Dubuque)
; Area college students recently participated in regional competitions focused on free enterprise. Students from Clarke College took part in the Students in Free Enterprise Regional Competition in Minneapolis, while students from the University of Dubuque matched their educational outreach projects
|