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Private corporation Concordance

Concordance status: generated from processed OCR/PDF text. Treat these as source-location aids until each passage is checked against the scan.

3 hits

Total text matches across processed Steinmetz sections.

1 sources

Sources containing at least one matched alias.

3 sections

Chapters, lectures, sections, or report divisions with matches.

Private corporation, private-corporation

SourceHitsSections
America and the New Epoch33
SectionSourceHitsWorkbenchLocation
Chapter 3: The Individualistic Era: From Competition to Co-operationAmerica and the New Epoch1Workbenchlines 874-1745
Chapter 10: Public and Private CorporationsAmerica and the New Epoch1Workbenchlines 4716-5059
Chapter 16: The Future CorporationAmerica and the New Epoch1Workbenchlines 6975-7567
Chapter 3: The Individualistic Era: From Competition to Co-operation - 1 hit(s)

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... lot of talk on the necessity of individual enterprise for progress, but even to- day and for some time back, when any really great work was considered, individual enter- prise usually failed, and the corporation, either the private corporation, or the public corpo- ration— municipality. State, or nation — had to step in.
Chapter 10: Public and Private Corporations - 1 hit(s)

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... ernment which have proven satisfactory, efficient, and economical— the gov- ernments of the industrial corporations. The municipality is a public corporation, owned and governed by the citizens; the indus- trial corporation is a private corporation, owned and operated by the stockholders. In size and capitalization, many industrial corporations are far larger than the average municipal corpora- tion; many smaller. Thus there is no essential difference in size. But the m ...
Chapter 16: The Future Corporation - 1 hit(s)

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... the municipality in the form they consider as just and proper, and then standing pat and refusing to consider any other arrangement, has led more than once to unnecessary controversies — usually to the disad- vantage of the private corporation, as obvious with the present attitude of the public toward the corporation. Especially such is liable to occur with smaller corporations, or smaller branches of large corporations, which cannot have sufficiently broad-minded m ...