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corporate and successor
As the Mars situation develops, Boyle sides against most of the First Hundred in favor of the increasingly authoritarian United Nations Office of Mars Affairs ( UNOMA ) and its successor, the corporate / quasi-fascist United Nations Transitional Authority ( UNTA ).
During the 1930s WKBW shared a CBS affiliation with then-sister station WGR, and in the 1940s was affiliated with the NBC " Blue " network and its corporate successor ABC, running as a conventional full service network affiliated station also offering local news and music programming.
Interhandel was the corporate successor of I. G.
They are also used metaphorically to indicate an " anointed " successor to any position of power, e. g., a political or corporate leader.
: the United States has, among other things, attempted or been perceived as attempting more or less unilaterally to do the following: pressure other countries to adopt American values and practices regarding human rights and democracy ; prevent other countries from acquiring military capabilities that could counter American conventional superiority ; enforce American law extra-territorially in other societies ; grade countries according to their adherence to American standards on human rights, drugs, terrorism, nuclear proliferation, missile proliferation, and now religious freedom ; apply sanctions against countries that do not meet American standards on these issues ; promote American corporate interests under the slogans of free trade and open markets and GATT being the main examples of the free trade policy initiatives of the 1990s ; shape World Bank and International Monetary Fund policies to serve those same corporate interests ; intervene in local conflicts in which it has relatively little direct interest ; ... ; promote American arms sales abroad while attempting to prevent comparable sales by other countries ; force out one U. N. secretary-general and dictate the appointment of his successor ; expand NATO initially to include Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic and no one else ; undertake military action against Iraq and later maintain harsh economic sanctions against the regime ; and categorize certain countries as ' rogue states ,' excluding them from global institutions ....< sup > 1 </ sup >
In 2007, the EPA announced legal agreements among itself, Michigan, Georgia-Pacific, and Millennium Holdings ( a corporate successor of the Allied Paper Corporation ) requiring the companies to clean up an estimated $ 21, 000, 000 worth of environmental damage to the Plainwell Impoundment Area.
The rest of it is owned and managed by the Fox Film Corporation's corporate successor ( and namesake ), Fox News Channel.
Baton's independents and newly-disaffiliated CHRO were sold to CHUM Limited, becoming NewNet stations ; however CTVglobemedia ( now Bell Media ), Baton's successor as a corporate entity, reacquired them as part of its purchase of CHUM Limited in 2007.
For the new districts which made no such petition ( or where it was refused ), for each former municipal borough in the district, which was not to become a successor parish, a body corporate styled the charter trustees of the town or city, were established, under section 246 ( 4 ) of the Act.
The EMD E5 was a, A1A-A1A passenger train-hauling diesel locomotive manufactured by Electro-Motive Corporation, and its corporate successor, General Motors ' Electro-Motive Division ( EMD ) of La Grange, Illinois, and produced exclusively for the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad (“ The Burlington Route ”), and its subsidiaries, during 1940 and 1941.
Autogrill renamed the company HMSHost, which is largely the corporate successor to the 1897 Van Noy operation and continues to provide products, services, and entertainment to customers on the go.
The company was privatized by Bulgarian corporate investors in 2002 and has since faced stiff competition from foreign carriers, as well as the newly-established successor of Balkan, Bulgaria Air.
The EMD E6 was a, A1A-A1A, passenger train locomotive manufactured by Electro-Motive Corporation, and its corporate successor, General Motors Electro-Motive Division, of La Grange, Illinois.
Commerce Bancshares is the corporate parent of Commerce Bank, the successor of the Commerce Trust Company and the National Bank of Commerce.
King World, however, distributed newer CBS shows, while the older shows were syndicated by corporate affiliate CBS Paramount Television, the successor to the original distributor Viacom Enterprises.
The successor firm Wurdeman and Becket went on to design Bullock's Pasadena ( 1944 ) and a couple of corporate headquarters.
State and federal courts ruled against him, though, and he grudgingly gave access to the corporate offices to his temporary successor, Frank S. Bond — though in surrendering the physical office, Gowen retained possession of the company records.
More recently, the concept of Business Process Management ( BPM ) has gained major attention in the corporate world and can be considered as a successor to the BPR wave of the 1990s, as it is evenly driven by a striving for process efficiency supported by information technology.
The next morning, during the State Bar's organization meeting, the CBA yielded to its successor by winding up its affairs and ending its corporate existence.
The S & L, along with other assets of the corporate successor to DOMCO, Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation ( DOSCO ), were expropriated by the Cape Breton Development Corporation ( DEVCO ) on March 30, 1968.
The EMD Model 40 was a two-axle diesel-electric locomotive built by Electro-Motive Corporation, and its corporate successor, General Motors ' Electro-Motive Division ( EMD ) between August 1940 and April 1943.

corporate and DuMont
It was a partner in the DuMont Television Network, and the Paramount Theaters chain, spun off from the corporate / studio parent, merged with ABC in a deal that helped cement that network's status as a major network.
DuMont Broadcasting, meanwhile, would change its corporate name twice within the next three years before settling on Metromedia in 1961.
In May 1958 DuMont Broadcasting changed its name to the Metropolitan Broadcasting Corporation in an effort to distinguish itself from its former corporate parent.

corporate and Fox
The film tells the story of Bud Fox ( Sheen ), a young stockbroker desperate to succeed who becomes involved with his hero, Gordon Gekko ( Douglas ), a wealthy, unscrupulous corporate raider.
In his review for the Globe and Mail, Jay Scott praised the performances of the two leads: " But Douglas's portrayal of Gordon Gekko is an oily triumph and as the kid Gekko thinks he has found in Fox (' Poor, smart and hungry ; no feelings '), Charlie Sheen evolves persuasively from gung-ho capitalist child to wily adolescent corporate raider to morally appalled adult ".
1890 Lee Fox built the first sawmill within the Lake Arthur corporate limits ; it was destroyed by fire in 1905, as was the Brewer, Reynolds and Streater Mill that had been built on the lake front in 1900.
Animation, New Line Cinema and Castle Rock Entertainment, all of which are owned by Cinemax corporate parent Time Warner's Warner Bros. Entertainment division ), DreamWorks Animation ( which lasts until 2013, at which time the Netflix streaming service will assume pay-TV rights ), 20th Century Fox ( and subsidiaries 20th Century Fox Animation and Fox Searchlight Pictures ) and Universal Studios ( and subsidiaries Universal Animation Studios, Working Title Films, Illumination Entertainment and Focus Features ).
" Malcolm in the Middle " was produced by Satin City and Regency Television in association with Fox Television Studios ( syndicated by Fox corporate sibling 20th Television ).
The network's soccer coverage is not limited to game play ; Fox Soccer airs reruns of Dream Team, a British soap opera that aired in the UK on Fox Soccer's corporate cousin Sky One until 2007 and focused on a fictional Premiership team.
News Corporation, 20th Century Fox's corporate parent, continues to make movies and started the Fox Network, one of the four principal commercial broadcast television networks in the United States.
Topics addressed include the Business Plot, where in 1933, General Smedley Butler exposed an alleged corporate plot against then U. S. President Franklin Roosevelt ; the tragedy of the commons ; Dwight D. Eisenhower's warning people to beware of the rising military-industrial complex ; economic externalities ; suppression of an investigative news story about Bovine Growth Hormone on a Fox News Channel affiliate television station ; the invention of the soft drink Fanta by the Coca-Cola Company due to the trade embargo on Nazi Germany ; the alleged role of IBM in the Nazi holocaust ( see IBM and the Holocaust ); the Cochabamba protests of 2000 brought on by the privatization of Bolivia's municipal water supply by the Bechtel Corporation ; and in general themes of corporate social responsibility, the notion of limited liability, the corporation as a psychopath, and the corporation as a person.
The story follows two corporate extraction agents, the narrator and Fox, who are quickly betrayed after a successful operation.
From 2003 to 2007, Gallagher starred as Sandy Cohen, a Jewish public defender and corporate lawyer, on the Fox television show The O. C ..
In 1994, Scripps Howard arranged for several of its stations ( including WFTS-TV ( channel 28 ), which was about to lose its Fox affiliation to then-CBS affiliate WTVT ( channel 13 ) due to a corporate deal between New World Communications, WTVT's owner at the time, and Fox ) to affiliate with ABC.
Along with its corporate cousin, the Ford Fairmont, it was the first use in the Mercury division of the long-lived unibody Fox platform, which did not completely leave production until 2004.
It was optional in Fox chassis cars including the Mustang and corporate cousin Mercury Capri, Thunderbird, Fairmont, and standard equipment in the Ford LTD.
KUTP produced its own broadcast graphics, in conjunction with the Suns until the 2010-11 NBA season ; this role was taken over thereafter by corporate sibling Fox Sports Arizona.
The neighborhood also supports a number of offices, including the corporate headquarters of insurance giant GEICO ( originally Government Employees Insurance Company ) and the Ritz-Carlton hotel chain, and a concentration of broadcast media including the studios of WMAL, WMAL-FM, and WTTG ( Fox 5 ).

corporate and only
:" A corporate body can only act by agents, and it is, of course, the duty of those agents so to act as best to promote the interests of the corporation whose affairs they are conducting.
The Orders of Morning and Evening Prayer were extended by the inclusion of a penitential section at the beginning including a corporate confession of sin and a general absolution, although the text was printed only in Morning Prayer with rubrical directions to use it in the evening as well.
In privately held companies, the Board of Directors often only consists of the statutory corporate officials, and in sole proprietorship and partnerships, the board is entirely optional, and if it does exist, only operates in an advisory capacity to the owner or partners.
Even so, a 2009 study revealed that only 39 % of corporate executives believe their employees have the right tools and authority to solve client problems.
The importance of a corporate body, regardless of its exact function, when such a body is a creature of statute is that its active functions can only be within the scope detailed by the statute which created that corporation.
Venter writes that his main goal was always to accelerate science and thereby discovery, and he only sought help from the corporate world when he couldn't find funding in the public sector.
However, this approach has been only somewhat more effective than the harmonization approach: while states are not as concerned about having foreign traditions of corporate governance imposed on their companies, which the harmonization approach could well entail ; they also wish to ensure that the EU-wide system would be palatable to the traditions of their national companies, so that they will not be put at a disadvantage compared to the other member states.
Associated First National Pictures expanded from only distributing films to producing them in 1924, and changed its corporate name to First National Pictures, Inc.
In the United Kingdom, only peers of the realm, a few baronets, senior members of orders of knighthood, and some corporate bodies are granted supporters.
( Sennett's corporate bosses retained the Keystone trademark and produced a cheap series of comedy shorts that were " Keystones " in name only: they were unsuccessful, and Sennett had no connection with them.
According to Steven Zivanic, senior director and corporate communications of HDS, " this campaign has not only helped the firm in its own area, but it has given the data storage firm a broader audience.
Physical and corporate persons do not have allodial title ; they do not " own " land but only enjoy estates in the land, also known as " equitable interests.
It is not unusual for an individual to create an inter vivos trust with a corporate trustee who may then disburse funds only for causes articulated in the trust document.
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the corporate culture of New York was a primary center for the construction of skyscrapers, and was rivaled only by Chicago on the American continent.
The first IMC node, attached as it was to the Seattle anti-corporate globalization protests, was seen by activists as an alternative news source to that of the corporate media, which they accused of only showing violence and confrontation, and portraying all protesters negatively.
Although Dow compiled the index to gauge the performance of the industrial sector within the American economy, the index's performance continues to be influenced by not only corporate and economic reports, but also by domestic and foreign political events such as war and terrorism, as well as by natural disasters that could potentially lead to economic harm.
The automotive company Volkswagen was the only foreign corporate member of LIFE, dispatching a researcher for a duration of three years.
The AAFCS ( American Association of Family & Consumer Sciences ) represents teachers, educators, cooperatives, business, designers and nutritionists. The American Association of Family & Consumer Sciences ( AAFCS ) is the only national forum where K-12 teachers, university educators, and corporate executives collaborate to improve the quality of individual and family life.
By limiting the dialogue and discourse between specific candidates and political parties, the media can psychologically limit choices in the public mind and thus assure that only politicians acceptable to the ruling class and corporate structure are elected to public office.
Merrick writes, " But those ecclesiastics who not only raised their eyebrows over the sins of the Beloved but also expressed doubts about his policies reflected the corporate attitude of the First Estate more accurately.
* 1959 The Texas Company changes its corporate name to Texaco, Inc. to better reflect the value of the Texaco brand name, which represented the biggest selling gasoline brand in the U. S. and only marketer selling gasoline under one brand name in all 50 states.
DRM would be implemented by encrypting DRM-protected files and only making the decryption key available to corporate trusted applications.
In March 2009, a study showed that StarOffice could only gain 3 % market share in the corporate market.

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