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Topics related to "Politics is job #1; by providing major funding to radical groups, the Ford"

remote job entry remote job entry
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Zophar Zophar
Zophar , in the Bible, comforter of Job.... Read more
Pamela Gordon Pamela Gordon
Pamela Gordon 1955– Premier of Bermuda Entered Political Arena A Job No One Wanted Sovereignty Unlikely Sources When Pamela Gordon was sworn in as premier of Bermuda in March of 1997, she became the Caribbean island Read more
Comprehensive Employment and Training Act Comprehensive Employment and Training Act
Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA), U.S. government program designed to assist economically disadvantaged, unemployed, or underemployed persons. Enacted in 1973, CETA provided block grants to state and local governments to support public and private job training and such youth... Read more
Steven Paul Jobs Steven Paul Jobs
Steven Paul Jobs , 1955-, American businessman, b. San Francisco. Working with Stephen Wozniak, Jobs helped launch the personal-computer revolution by introducing the first Apple computer in 1976. Jobs later successfully established Apple's line as a user-friendly, graphically oriented alternative... Read more
Recruiting Recruiting
Recruiting Recruiting in the broadest sense is the activity of acquiring new employees to fill a job "from the outside." Filling jobs internally is usually referred to as transferring, reassigning, or promoting people. Recruitment will be more intensive if the job to be filled is "permanent."... Read more
Fair Employment Practices Committee Fair Employment Practices Committee
Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC), established (1941) within the Office of Production Management by executive order of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. It was created to promote the fullest employment of all available persons and to eliminate discriminatory employment practices.... Read more
Lebanese Civil War Lebanese Civil War
Lebanese Civil War CAUSES OF THE WAR FIGHTING FROM 1975 TO 1985 END OF THE CIVIL WAR BIBLIOGRAPHY The Lebanese civil war erupted in April 1975 and ended in October 1990. Since its independence in 1943, Lebanon has been governed by a confessional political system in which parliamentary seats... Read more
Job Job
Job , book of the Bible. The book is of unknown authorship and date, although many scholars assign it to a time between 600 BC and 400 BC A lament in narrative form, the subject is the problem of good and evil in the world: "Why do the just suffer and the wicked flourish?" In the prose prologue... Read more
Employee performance Employee performance
JOB PERFORMANCE What is the relationship between age and job performance? The average age of people in the workforce is getting higher, with increasing numbers of middle-aged and older workers employed in many different jobs (Fullerton; Johnston and Packer). Thus, it is important to know whether... Read more
Charles Francis Murphy Charles Francis Murphy
Charles Francis Murphy 1858-1924, American political boss, b. New York City. He was the owner of many saloons in New York City and took a keen interest in Democratic politics. His services to Tammany Hall brought him a job as dock commissioner. After the retirement of Richard Croker, Murphy became... Read more
Michael Stanley Dukakis Michael Stanley Dukakis
Michael Stanley Dukakis , 1933-, American political leader, b. Brookline, Mass. He was a Democratic member of the Massachusetts house of representatives (1963-70) and was twice elected governor of Massachusetts (1975-79; 1983-91). As a member of the state legislature he sponsored the nation's first... Read more
Marcus Daly Marcus Daly
Marcus Daly American miner and business leader Marcus Daly (1841-1900) founded the Anaconda Copper Mining Company and was a power in Montana politics. Marcus Daly was born on Dec. 5, 1841, at Ballyjamesduff in County Cavan, Ireland. In 1856 he emigrated, settling first in New York City,... Read more
Fernando Wood Fernando Wood
Fernando Wood Fernando Wood (1812-1881), American politician, was mayor of New York City, and a leading Peace Democrat during the Civil War. Fernando Wood was born in Philadelphia on June 14, 1812. After a meager education, he worked at a number of jobs, twice failing in businesses of his... Read more
Sir Geoffrey Howe Sir Geoffrey Howe
Sir Geoffrey Howe British Foreign Secretary Geoffrey Howe (born 1926) was one of Britain's most important political leaders through the 1980s. Sir (Richard Edward) Geoffrey Howe was the chancellor of the Exchequer, entrusted with the key job of directing economic policy, in the Conservative... Read more
Tillie Olsen Tillie Olsen
Tillie Olsen Tillie Olsen (born 1913) is widely regarded as one of the most important women writers in America. Although her reputation was built on a relatively small body of work, she is recognized for her skill as a storyteller and her determination to give voice to the hopes and frustrations... Read more
Kjell Magne Bondevik Kjell Magne Bondevik
Kjell Magne Bondevik Norwegian politician Kjell Magne Bondevik (born 1947) twice served as prime minister of his country. An ordained minister who spent the majority of his career as a legislator, he attracted headlines around the world in 1998 when he took a brief leave of absence during his... Read more
behemoth behemoth
behemoth [Heb.,=plural of beast ], large, fanciful primeval monster, like Leviathan, evoking the hippopotamus mentioned in the Book of Job. In the Book of Psalms the term occurs in a non-mythological context.... Read more
Illegal immigrants Illegal immigrants
Chapter 5Illegal Aliens BARRIERS TO LEGAL IMMIGRATION: TIME AND MONEY According to Stuart Anderson and David Miller, in Legal Immigrants: Waiting Forever (May 2006, http://www.competeamerica.org/resource/h1b_glance/NFAP_Study.pdf), "those who 'play by the rules' are likely to wait many years" to... Read more
Donald H. Barden Donald H. Barden
Don H. Barden 1943– Business executive At a Glance… Tried His Hand at Politics Traveled Information Superhighway Music or Politics? Sources Don Barden, the former owner of a Detroit cable television empire that employs more than 300 workers and serves nearly 120,000 households, has... Read more
Jemima Jemima
Jemima ♀ Biblical name (meaning ‘dove’ or ‘bright as day’ in Hebrew), borne by the eldest of the daughters of Job, born to him towards the end of his life when his prosperity had been restored (Job 42:14). The name is recorded from the early 1700s in England, and... Read more
Kezia Kezia
Kezia ♀ From the Hebrew word for the cassia tree (the English name of which is derived, via Latin and Greek, from Hebrew or a related Semitic source). It is borne in the Bible by one of Job's daughters, born to him towards the end of his life, after his prosperity had been restored (Job... Read more
unemployment unemployment
unemployment condition of one who is able to work but unable to find work. Once assumed to be voluntary, idleness was punishable by law; however it is now recognized that unemployment often arises from factors beyond the control of the individual worker. Unemployment may be due to seasonal layoffs... Read more
acculturation acculturation
acculturation culture changes resulting from contact among various societies over time. Contact may have distinct results, such as the borrowing of certain traits by one culture from another, or the relative fusion of separate cultures. Early studies of acculturation reacted against the... Read more
Sir Alexander Bustamante Sir Alexander Bustamante
Sir Alexander Bustamante , 1884-1977, prime minister of Jamaica (1962-67). The son of an Irish father and a Jamaican mother, he was adopted and taken to Spain as a child. He joined the Spanish army, then traveled extensively, working at a wide variety of jobs. Returning to Jamaica in 1932, he became... Read more
Federal Communications Commission Federal Communications Commission
Federal Communications Commission (FCC), independent executive agency of the U.S. government established in 1934 to regulate interstate and foreign communications in the public interest. The FCC is composed of five members, not more than four of whom may be members of the same political party,... Read more
Edwin Lawrence Godkin Edwin Lawrence Godkin
Edwin Lawrence Godkin , 1831-1902, American editor, b. Moyne, Ireland, of English parentage. His idealism found expression in his History of Hungary and the Magyars (1853) and won him the job of correspondent (1853-55) to the London Daily News during the Crimean War. In 1856 he came to the... Read more
Great Society Great Society
Great Society in U.S. history, term for the domestic policies of President Lyndon Johnson . In his first State of the Union message, he called for a war on poverty and the creation of a "Great Society," a prosperous nation that had overcome racial divisions. To this end, Johnson proposed an... Read more
picketing picketing
picketing act of patrolling a place of work affected by a strike in order to discourage its patronage, to make public the workers' grievances, and in some cases to prevent strikebreakers from taking the strikers' jobs. Picketing may be by individuals or by groups. It has also been used by political... Read more
multinational corporation multinational corporation
multinational corporation business enterprise with manufacturing, sales, or service subsidiaries in one or more foreign countries, also known as a transnational or international corporation. These corporations originated early in the 20th cent. and proliferated after World War II. Typically, a... Read more

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