939 resultados para United States Steel Corporation
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Paged continuously.
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Appendix, parts 1 and 2; general index to Hearings, in v. 4.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"Exihibit B. Plans of employmee representation in effect at the plants of respondent, Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation"--Cover.
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Vol. 8 consists of "Appendix: parts 1 and 2. Report of the commissioner of corporations on the steel industry. Pt. I-II"; "General index to Hearings"; and "Investigation of United States steel corporation" (House rept. 1127, 62d Cong., 2d sess., submitted by Mr. Stanley, "Views of the minority" by Mr. Gardner and Mr. Young)
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The title page for Part 2 says "S. Res. 188, Instructing the Committee on Education and Labor of the United States Senate to investigatethe strike of the employees of the steel mills of the United States, and so forth and S. Res. 202, authorizing the Committee on Education and Labor, in its investigation of the steel strike, to hold hearings, to employ a stenographer, to require the attendance of witnesses and the production of papers, documents, and so forth, and prescribing penalties for the refusal of witnesses to attend or answer questions."
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"June 1995."
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Bert M. Fernald, chairman.
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James A. Reed, chairman.
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"Serial no. 96-H60."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Gary, Indiana is a city with indelible ties to industrial paternalism. Founded in 1906 by United States Steel Corporation to house workers of the trust’s showpiece mill, the emergence of this model company town was both the culmination of lessons learned from its predecessors’ mistakes and innovative corporate planning. U.S. Steel’s Progressive Era adaptation of welfare capitalism characterized the young city through a combination of direct community involvement and laissez-faire social control. This thesis examines the reactionary implementation of paternalist policies in Gary between 1906 and 1930 through the purviews of three elements under corporate influence: housing, education, and social welfare. Each category demonstrates how both the corporation and citizenry affected and adapted Gary’s physical and cultural landscape, public perceptions, and community identity. Parallel to the popular narrative throughout is that of Gary’s African-American community, and the controversial circumstances of this population’s segregated development.
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Mode of access: Internet.