41 Metaphors for organization

But no one ever dreams of being sober and vigilant at the right time, so the organization, like many larger such, is a broken reed.

[Footnote: My friend, Professor Alexander Johnson, of Princeton, is inclined to regard these frontier county organizations as reproductions of a very primitive type of government indeed, deeming that they were formed primarily for war against outsiders, that their military organization was the essential feature, the real reason for their existence.

The revolutionary organization has hitherto been simply a military provisionary power, and no definitive constitution of government has yet been established in New Granada in place of that organized by the constitution of 1858.

"This organization," he said, "is the Good Samaritan, loving to bestow its aid upon the poorest and most despised, the most severely wounded races of our country."

The organization which grew up was a true survival of the fittest, both in personnel and in methods.

As I have before stated, our first organization was the picking-gang.

Only an organization can be an interpreter here.

To adopt a plan of labor and give it efficiency, the organization of Conferences became a necessity.

This organization is now a living, vital force in the affairs of Ireland on both sides of the Atlantic, Mr. Redmond being still its h

The general constitution of the judiciary power, as delegated from the kingship, the creation of several classes of magistrates devoted to this great social function, and, especially, the strong organization and the permanence of the parliament of Paris, were far more important progressions in the development of civil order and society in France.

A few years ago it was generally believed that the organization of the old German tribes was politically an almost perfect democracy, and economically a communism in which all had equal claims upon the land.

He consideredat least his course can only be so interpretedthat the organization of a League in all its details was the principal task to be accomplished by the Conference, a task that he felt must be completed before other matters were settled.

Such organizations were a recourse at the same time for mutual aid and for the enhancement of social prestige.

In these earlier stages, when organization of both men and women was mainly local, women's influence, when felt at all, was felt strongly within the locality affected, and it is therefore only there that we hear about it.

First of all is the Red Cross, but that organization really is a non-combatant arm of the national service; and its work, generously financed by public subscription, is the greatest of its kind ever done in field or hospital, in any war.

The more ordinary the mental and moral organization and culture of the individual, the more far-fetched and dear-bought must be his enjoyments.

The history of the Jesuits shows this,that an organization of forces, or what we call discipline or government, is a great thing.

Thus it would seem that while organization of labour may become a real remedy for "sweating" in any industry to which it is vigorously applied, it cannot be relied upon ever entirely to crash out the evil.

So our organization became the Mysterious F-O-R, and you'll find out as time goes on what the answer is.

Political organization is necessary in order to co-operation for ends which benefit the society directly, and the individual only indirectly.

The organization of labour is the second form of remedy.

Political organization has always been a powerful preoccupation of mankind, and the earliest records testify to its antiquity.

But Joe's books argued further and most dogmatically that this organization by the selfish few was a necessary step in progress, that when their work was finished the toilers, the millions, would arise and seize the organization and use it thereafter for the good of all.

Many of the newspapers which had not yet forgiven the passing of Catholic Emancipation made it a ground for the strongest imputations on the Duke himself, some of them even going the length of affirming that he aimed at the throne, and that the organization of this new force was the means on which he reckoned for the attainment of his object.

The organization of the East India Company was no obstacle to a measure demanded by the honor of England and the welfare of India; and certainly the parchment of the Second Charles will not deter any deliberate expression by Parliament in regard to the colonization of Central British America.

41 Metaphors for  organization