Word: bans
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Eiijah Adlow '16, Associate Justice at Bosten Municipal Court, who gave the Watch and Ward Society its first major fatback last week by refusing to ban risking Caldwell's "Tragic Ground," old the SERVICE NEWS yesterday that common sense" must be the judiciary's side in decisions regarding controversial temperature...
...power to ban the hair-raisers outright, but a word to the wise should do as well. A word to the wise, from CBC, has already eliminated all pregnancy episodes from Canadian soap operas. "We expect no difficulty," says Dr. Frigon, who is now busy dropping hints about horror to Canadian stations...
...Smuts's ban stands...
...Krug warned the U.S. that this would not mean expansion of the spot plan. There is no hope for that until the military's sudden demands for increased materiel, such as heavy artillery and small-arms ammunition, are met. He has refused demands of the armed services to ban the manufacture of civilian goods in areas where manpower shortages are greatest. Instead, WPB issued a new ruling this week which permits civilian goods to be made only if "war production is on schedule, is kept on schedule and is able to meet the demands of increased schedules." The actual...
...four and a half years Sergei Koussevitzky's Boston Symphony could make no recordings-first because it did not belong to James Caesar Petrillo's musicians' union, and then because it did. Last week, with the recording ban finally lifted (TIME, Nov. 20) and the U.S. record-buying public about to go on a shopping spree, Koussevitzky & Co. were hard at work on a brand-new version of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. Keeping pace, the Philadelphia Orchestra was waxing Strauss's Death and Transfiguration, Beethoven's Seventh and Dvorak's New World symphonies...