It would be natural to expect that so important a profession would attract into its ranks the ablest and the most ambitious of the youth of the country; that the keenest emulation would prevail among those who had entered it; and that such as were endowed... The Civil Service of Great Britain - Página 59por Robert Moses - 1914 - 324 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| 1855 - 494 páginas
...evils they describe, that the changes proposed by them are recommended. It is stated, that while " it would be natural to expect " that so important...attract into its ranks " the ablest and most ambitious youth of the country, " that the keenest emulation would prevail among those " who had entered it,... | |
| Richard Holt Hutton, Walter Bagehot - 1855 - 520 páginas
...fitness, is supported by a strongly-worded statement of the present deficiencies of the service. AA a " It would be natural to expect that so important a...profession would attract into its ranks the ablest and the most ambitious of the youth of the country ; that the keenest emulation would prevail among those... | |
| Great Britain. Civil Service Commission - 1859 - 470 páginas
...the most careful attention. It does not attract the ablest ', men. Nature of its inducements. Rvpoit. It would be natural to expect that so important a...profession would attract into its ranks the ablest and the i ambitious of the youth of the country ; that the keenest emulation would prevail among those... | |
| George Smith, William Makepeace Thackeray - 1869 - 800 páginas
...functions of Government ; " but observe that " its organization is far from perfect. It does not attract to its ranks the ablest and most ambitious of the youth of the country." Those who shrink from the competition of professional life, who are physically weak, or constitutionally... | |
| The London Quarterly VOL.XXVII October 1866 and January,1867 - 1867 - 554 páginas
...Stafford Northcote and Sir Charles Trevelyan in the lleport of 1853, that it would be natural to expect so important a profession would attract into its ranks...the ablest and most ambitious of the youth of the country—that the keenest emulation would prevail among those who had entered it— —and that such... | |
| 1874 - 786 páginas
...;ion took place as to the desiress of competitive examination. In irst report the commissioners said t would be natural to expect that so important a profession...attract into its ranks the ablest and most ambitious." Mr. Waddington, then Under Secretary for the Home Department, laughed this statement to scorn. ",He... | |
| H. J. Hanham - 1969 - 516 páginas
...organisation is 323 far from perfect, and that its amendment is deserving of the most careful attention. It would be natural to expect that so important a...profession would attract into its ranks the ablest and the most ambitious of the youth of the country; that the keenest emulation would prevail among those... | |
| Geoffrey Wilson - 1976 - 842 páginas
...changes which take place in the responsible administration are matters of sufficient notoriety . . . It would be natural to expect that so important a...profession would attract into its ranks the ablest and the most ambitious of the youth of the country; that the keenest emulation would prevail among those... | |
| Michael Young - 2011 - 200 páginas
...the less 1. The authors of the Northcote-Trevelyan report were commendably aware of what was needed. 'It would be natural to expect that so important a...profession would attract into its ranks the ablest and the most ambitious of the youth of the country; that the keenest emulation would prevail among those... | |
| David Charles Douglas, George Malcolm Young, W. D. Handcock - 1996 - 1050 páginas
...organisation is far from perfect, and that its amendment is deserving of the most careful attention. It would be natural to expect that so important a...profession would attract into its ranks the ablest and the most ambitious of the youth of the country ; that the keenest emulation would prevail among those... | |
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