Word: bans
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Three: "A new Federal labor law must outlaw unfair bargaining practices by employers and unions." Stevenson noted that "unions have protested vigorously against" Taft-Hartley's ban on unfair union practices as compared to the Wagner Act, which forbade only unfair employer practices. 'In principle. Stevenson seemed to prefer Taft-Hartley on this point. "It is only common sense . . . that we must forbid . . . jurisdictional strikes, and strikes or boycotts attempting to force an employer to deal with one union when another has been certified as the representative of his employees." Taft-Hartley's provisions on this point...
...Britain would lift its ban on exports to Iran, and unfreeze Iranian sterling holdings in the Commonwealth...
...Sept. 1, the U.S. Government will lift its ban on the import of cattle and meat products from Mexico. The embargo was imposed five years ago after foot-and-mouth disease broke out in Mexico and threatened to spread across the border. About 500,000 head of cattle will be shipped north in the first year of renewed trade. At current prices that should be worth some $140 million to Mexico...
...some rights." To most newsmen, however, it was clear-cut: a clear-cut example of how not to fight Communism. Wrote New York Times Radio & TV Editor Jack Gould: "Particularly disturbing is the company's refusal to discuss Mr. Wechsler's dismissal . . . Instead of curbing Communism, [the ban] is helping it. For under the vicious credo of 'controversially,' one of the most articulate voices speaking out against Communism has been silenced on a TV program...
After New York State's Board of Regents banned Roberto Rossellini's controversial The Miracle as "sacrilegious," the U.S. Supreme Court upset the ban. It ruled that 1) the cinema is entitled to the rights of free speech and free press, and 2) those rights may not be abridged on grounds, e.g., sacrilege, that no U.S. official is qualified to define, because no U.S. official can officially define what is sacred. Last week two other censors banned The Miracle on other grounds. Ohio took exception to the film for purely moral reasons. Citing the seduction of the idiot...