Word: anti-trust
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Competition is the real key to the enterprise system. . . . Every unnecessary curb on competition is a curb on opportunities for Americans-a curb on jobs, on higher standards of living. That's why the principles of the Anti-Trust laws are endorsed by American industry...
...Justice Department's Anti-Trust division, the irreverent, irrepressible Assistant Attorney General had long since reached a dead end. First capital, then labor had been irritated by his monolithic determination to enforce the Sherman and Clayton anti-trust laws. Two years ago Arnold's brisk roundup of labor unions for trade-restraining practices was brought to an abrupt halt. The Supreme Court virtually forbade anti-trust prosecution of organized labor...
...decision* the Court upheld the April 1941 conviction of A.M.A. and its Washington affiliate of violating the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. The organizations were fined $2,500 and $1,500 respectively for influencing physicians and hospitals to boycott Group Health Association, Inc., to which 3,300 Government workers in the District of Columbia belong...
...companies few are busier with critical war work than Bendix Aviation Corp., suppliers of nearly 150 high-precision parts for every big Army bomber. Last week Bendix officials faced an other big time-consuming job: to answer a civil suit filed by Thurman Arnold's Anti-Trust Division in the New Jersey courts, charging conspiracy to choke competition and peg prices in aircraft accessories...
...Bendix, Charles Marcus, vire president in charge of engineering, who only recently returned from England armed with new ideas for improving the company's equipment. According to the company: "These must all be neglected while Mr. Marcus defends himself and the company for the second time in an anti-trust proceeding now brought in a court of equity concerning contracts no longer in effect...