Word: bans
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...direct ban on Germany's alliance with "any power" which fought against Hitler. It would be allowed "such national armed forces (land, air and naval) as shall be required for the country's defense...
...addition to expanding the principles of round-robin competition, the new league affirmed its ban on spring football practice and athletic scholarship, thereby substantially keeping intact an informal president's pact drawn up in 1945 to prevent commercialization in Ivy college athletics...
Some Taft-Hartley provisions, designed to modify the Wagner Act, have little effect because they are unenforceable or simply ignored. Hence, some of the proposed changes would simply bring the law in line with reality. The closed-shop ban, for example, has been ignored, notably in the construction, maritime and amusement trades where the unions have the labor market sewed up. The Administration wants to permit a virtual closed shop in these industries. When a firm handles work for a struck company, the union obviously has a grievance-and in such cases Eisenhower would legalize secondary boycotts...
...ban on strategic trade with the Communist world was harming mankind; the U.S. was inciting German militarists to fresh "aggression" in Europe...
...that had happened to Evie herself. She was about to go down the reception line at a White House party when she remembered an unpleasant rumor that had gone the rounds. Was it true, she asked Mamie Eisenhower's Secretary Mary Jane McCaffree, that there was a new ban against working reporters' going through the receiving line? Quite so, answered Mary Jane, and, in fact, they were never supposed...