Selected Readings in Employment and Manpower, Committee Print 88th Congress, 2d Session |
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Page 301
... MILITARY The Engineering and Scientific Manpower Commissions have long called attention to the need for a reexamination of the manner in which engineers , scientists , and other highly trained persons may best serve their country in ...
... MILITARY The Engineering and Scientific Manpower Commissions have long called attention to the need for a reexamination of the manner in which engineers , scientists , and other highly trained persons may best serve their country in ...
Page 510
... military ) Num- ber 1955 Percent of total labor force ( in- cluding military ) Num- ber 186 , 600 130 , 080 1962 Percent of total labor force ( in- cluding military ) Projected 1970 * Num- ber 214 , 000 149,000 Percent of total labor ...
... military ) Num- ber 1955 Percent of total labor force ( in- cluding military ) Num- ber 186 , 600 130 , 080 1962 Percent of total labor force ( in- cluding military ) Projected 1970 * Num- ber 214 , 000 149,000 Percent of total labor ...
Page 587
... military purchases of food , clothing , medicines , and other soft goods and services from producers who obviously face no significant conversion problems provided the civilian economy is healthy_and growing . Only about $ 20 billion ...
... military purchases of food , clothing , medicines , and other soft goods and services from producers who obviously face no significant conversion problems provided the civilian economy is healthy_and growing . Only about $ 20 billion ...
Page 588
... military equipment , somewhat less than that $ 20 billion was for military and civilian personnel , about $ 10 billion was for pur- chases of nonmilitary goods and services ( such as food for the armed services , office equipment , etc ...
... military equipment , somewhat less than that $ 20 billion was for military and civilian personnel , about $ 10 billion was for pur- chases of nonmilitary goods and services ( such as food for the armed services , office equipment , etc ...
Page 591
... military functions and military assistance , atomic energy ( civilian and military uses ) , and stockpiling and expansion of defense production . In addition , it includes purchases by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration ...
... military functions and military assistance , atomic energy ( civilian and military uses ) , and stockpiling and expansion of defense production . In addition , it includes purchases by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration ...
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Common terms and phrases
activities adjustment agencies aircraft areas automatic automation average Bureau Census chart civilian companies contractors contracts cost decade decline demand Department of Defense economic growth effect effort electronic employed employees employment equipment estimated expenditures Fabricated metal factors Federal firms fiscal full employment Government gross national product gross output impact important income increase industry investment labor force less machine machinery major manpower manufacturing mechanization ment military million missile NASA National Science Foundation nomic occupational operations percent period personnel persons plant ployment population postwar problem production programs projections reduced region rejectees requirements research and development result retraining rise scientific scientists and engineers sector Selective Service System skills Statistics subcommittee technical technological change tion trends U.S. Department unem unemployed unemployment rate United wage women workers World War II
Popular passages
Page 759 - And so these men of Indostan Disputed loud and long, Each in his own opinion Exceeding stiff and strong, Though each was partly in the right, And all were in the wrong!
Page 270 - Education as a part of the allocation to the US Office of Education in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
Page 295 - Commission, the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
Page 747 - ... following objectives: (a) To preserve management and employee skills necessary to the fulfillment of Government contracts and purchases ; (b) To maintain productive facilities ; (c) To improve utilization of the Nation's total manpower potential by making use of the manpower resources of each area; (d) To help assure timely delivery of required goods and services and to promote readiness for expanded effort by locating procurement where the needed manpower and facilities are fully available.
Page 727 - Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura, which shall constitute the southern division of said district.
Page 342 - The quantity of materials which the same number of people can work up, increases in a great proportion as labour comes to be more and more subdivided ; and as the operations of each workman are gradually reduced to a greater degree of simplicity, a variety of new machines come to be invented for facilitating and abridging those operations.
Page 662 - JPL (which had responsibility for administration of the contract with the California Institute of Technology for the operation of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory) and the Contracts Division of the Western Operations Office (now called the Western Support Office).
Page 450 - Nation. 2. This progress can and must be achieved without the sacrifice of human values. 3. Achievement of technological progress without sacrifice of human values requires a combination of private and governmental action, consonant with the principles of a free society.
Page 887 - ... the contract is in a field of science or technology in which there has been little significant experience outside of work funded by the government, or where the government has been the principal developer of the field, and the acquisition of exclusive rights at the tune of contracting might confer on the contractor a preferred or dominant position...
Page 888 - Where the government may acquire the principal rights and does not elect to secure a patent in a foreign country, the contractor may file and retain the principal or exclusive foreign rights subject to retention by the government of at least a royalty free license for governmental purposes and on behalf of any foreign government pursuant to any existing or future treaty or agreement with the United States.