Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Industrial and organizational psychology" ¶ 118
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Fiedler's and on
Sherman's " The End of a Symphony ," spotlighting Arthur Fiedler's Boston Pops Orchestra, reached # 113 on the " Bubbling Under " chart in 1964, but did not make the Hot 100.
ESPN personality Chris Berman would also occasionally allude to Fiedler's faith by referring to him as Fiedler on the Roof after performing well in games, even going far as to start singing If I Were a Rich Man during highlights.
Fred Fiedler's contingency model focused on a contingency model of leadership in organizations.

Fiedler's and .
The success of the project depended upon Fiedler's flight.
Fiedler's last appearance as Piglet's voice was in Pooh's Heffalump Halloween Movie.
It was one of John Fiedler's last works before his death.
Fiedler's relationship with the orchestra continued until the mid 1970's.
Fiedler's fate is unrevealed, but Leamas, in answer to Liz's question, says that he would most likely be shot.
Nevertheless, whilst driving to the Berlin Wall, Alec cynically tells Liz that Mundt's survival was more important to British Intelligence than either his own, Fiedler's or that of anyone else.
Under Fiedler's direction the orchestra's popularity spread far beyond the city of Boston through recordings, radio and television.
Under Fiedler's direction, the Boston Pops sold more commercial recordings than any other orchestra in the world, with total sales of albums, singles, tapes, and cassettes exceeding $ 50 million.
Also during Fiedler's tenure, the Pops and local public television station WGBH developed a series of weekly televised broadcasts recorded during the Pops ' regular season in Symphony Hall, Evening at Pops.
After Fiedler's death in 1979, he was succeeded as conductor of the Boston Pops by the noted film composer John Williams.
Hale also served as narrator for Arthur Fiedler's 1953 RCA Victor high fidelity recording with the Boston Pops Orchestra, which included Paul Dukas ' The Sorcerer's Apprentice and King Henry VIII dances by Camille Saint-Saëns and Edward German.
The Opatówek factory was the cash cow of Fiedler's company.
One of Adler's most famous roles from this period was as the villain Franz Moore in Herman Fiedler's adaptation of Schiller's The Robbers, which introduced Schiller into Yiddish theater.
Trailing 17-3 after a Matt Stover field goal, Fiedler's 40-yard pass to James McKnight at the Ravens 5-yard line bounced off the receiver's shoulder and was intercepted by defensive back Duane Starks, who returned the ball 26 yards to the 28-yard line.
At an early age, Fiedler's family moved from Newark to East Orange, New Jersey, a town that lacked a substantial Jewish community.
Fiedler's flirtations with socialist ideology continued in his undergraduate career.
His behavior led to many professors refusing to recommend him for graduate schools ; as Winchell notes, one professor even left a scathing and ironic remark in Fiedler's file: " Mr. Fiedler will never be a gentleman or a scholar " ( Winchell, 25 ).
In spite of Fiedler's scholarship, his move to Wisconsin for his MA left him very short of funds.
One of the more prominent of the campus Stalinists was Margaret Shipley, who became Fiedler's girlfriend.
Fiedler's first critical work appeared in 1948 and came about from his habit of reading American novels to his sons.
For instance, Queer theorist Christopher Looby argues that Fiedler's claims were noticeably given from a 20th century, urban perspective and did not adequately address the time period in which Huckleberry Finn was written.
Fiedler's argument includes descriptions of Montanans that were thought to be offensive to the actual residents of his community.
In 1956, Fiedler's defense of native rights was recognized by the Blackfoot Indian tribe.

Contingency and Theory
* Rorty, Richard, " From Ironist Theory to Private Allusions: Derrida ," in Richard Rorty, Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989.
* Susan McClary, " In Praise of Contingency: The Powers and Limits of Theory ", Keynote Address, Society for Music Theory 2009 Annual Meeting, Montréal, Canada
The Contingency Theory is a class of the behavioral theory that claims that there is no best way to organize a corporation, to lead a company, or to make decisions.
In the Contingency Theory on the Organization, it states that there is no universal or one best way to manage an organization.
In the Contingency Theory of Leadership, the success of the leader is a function of various factors in the form of subordinate, task, and / or group variables.
The term contingency table was first used by Karl Pearson in " On the Theory of Contingency and Its Relation to Association and Normal Correlation ", part of the Drapers ' Company Research Memoirs Biometric Series I published in 1904.
An explosion of theorizing, much of it at Stanford University and Carnegie Mellon, produced Bounded Rationality, Informal Organization, Contingency Theory, Resource Dependence, Institutional Theory, and Organizational Ecology theories, among many others.

Contingency and effectiveness
# Contingency: If a consequence does not contingently ( reliably, or consistently ) follow the target response, its effectiveness upon the response is reduced.

Contingency and on
Divine Will and the Mechanical Philosophy: Gassendi and Descartes on Contingency and Necessity in the Created World, Cambridge, UK / New York, Cambridge University Press.
Contingency Operating Base ( COB ) Delta is an American military installation located on the right bank of the Tigris directly across from Kut.
Two expansion packs were released, The Core Contingency on April 30, 1998 and Battle Tactics on June 30, 1998.
As part of his plan to provide open government, Riley has posted on the Governor's website the monthly expenditures from the Governor's Contingency Fund and the quarterly flight logs from all state airplanes.
On March 27, 2009, Daniels criticized the Obama Administration for " changing the name of the War on Terror to the " Overseas Contingency Operation " and referring to terrorism as " man-caused disasters "".
Contingency planning also included precautions against a further Chinese offensive, in which the US Eighth Army would conduct a delaying defence on successive positions.
; Contingency: A special type of card that is played on a card already in play and usually remains hidden until the card it is played on is affected.
Contingency fees also provide a powerful motivation to the attorney to work diligently on the client's case.
* Trigger, Bruce, Sociocultural Evolution: Calculation and Contingency ( New Perspectives on the Past ), Blackwell Publishers, 1998, ISBN 1-55786-977-4
The 786 SFS was re-designated the 435th Security Forces Squadron on 16 July 2009, and falls under the 435th Contingency Response Group ( CRG ) ( formerly 86 CRG ).
* HQ Commander, XVIII Airborne Corps, " The Contingency Corps ", Fort Bragg, North Carolina: The Commander of the was XVIII Airborne Corps was designated as the commander of Army Forces within the Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force and rotated with the other service or assigned as the overall commander depending on mission.
These missions were also referred to as Launch on Demand ( LOD ) and Contingency Shuttle Crew Support.
One of the main roads on Contingency Operating Base Speicher, in Tikrit, Iraq, is named in his honor.
Contingency is a common form of " after the fact " sponsorship whereby racers place stickers on their vehicles from companies that post monetary awards to racing teams for winning, in exchange for the right to use images of winning drivers and their cars in promotional literature and advertising.

0.141 seconds.