981 resultados para Chicago Board of Trade
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1961
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Report year ends Jan. 31.
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George W. Fuller, chairman.
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Title varies slightly.
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Description based on: 1922.
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Signed: H.A. Millis, chairman.
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Multigraphed.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Vol. for 1867, 1868, and 1869 includes: Sanitary history of Chicago from 1833 to 1870.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Part of the illustrative matter is folded.
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Reportt year ends June 30; 1857/72, April 30
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Corporate scandals are as old as the corporate form itself. Consider, for example, the controversies surrounding the role of one of the first modern corporations, the British East India Company, in the Bengal famine of 1770 and in the Chinese opium trade. Yet it is the increasing scale and scope of unethical acts carried out by individuals in the name, and interests, of corporations that continue to be concerning. Recent revelations surrounding the extent of bribery and covert surveillance used by News Corporation journalists in its British operations continue to shock the world and undermine confidence in that organiszation and journalists in general. Yet despite the systemic nature of many of these unethical activities, corporate leaders generally plead ignorance when transgressions come to light. During the enquity into the News Corporation scandal, Rupert Murdoch, the CEO and chairman, rejected the assertion that he was ultimately 'responsible for this whole fiasco' (House of Commons, 2011, Q.230). Instead, like many corporate leaders before him, Murdoch placed blame on the employees within the newspaper. His responses poses an increasingly important question: Do corporate leaders bear responsibility for the conduct of individuals within a corporation and, if so, why?