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Word: biased (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...unfair labor tactic? Yes, said the NLRB, because the lockout forced the unions to abandon their wage demands. Moreover, it was so timed that it nullified the unions' strike power during the company's most vulnerable period. The court sharply disagreed. The company showed no antiunion bias, said Justice Potter Stewart for the unanimous bench. Rather, it legally used the "bargaining lockout" as a corollary of the "bargaining strike." Lockouts may disrupt strike plans, but the right to strike does not include "the right exclusively to determine the timing and duration of all work stoppages. The right...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Supreme Court: Limits on Labor & Management | 4/9/1965 | See Source »

Anti-Behavioral Bias...

Author: By Thomas C. Hornz, | Title: Gov: Too Traditional? | 3/31/1965 | See Source »

...important, in the long run, as attracting well-known behaviorists, is achieving balance among lower-level appointments. And several professors admit that there is a (partly unconscious) anti-behavioral bias at this level. Departments tend to themselves, as senior members are marily of work being done in their such empiricists as V.O. Key have -building personality" of some of the more traditionalist professors, such as Friedrich or Elliott...

Author: By Thomas C. Hornz, | Title: Gov: Too Traditional? | 3/31/1965 | See Source »

...Vietnam (i.e. it is simply a peasant revolt in which the U.S. has no business meddling); or that the liberal warmongers malign the peaceloving Chinese with their charges of aggression; or, in their frankest moments, that Chinese imperialism is better for the East than American imperialism. This underlying bias is in no way preferable to the liberal bias. It is one of the minor tragedies of undergraduate politics that M-2-M has become the most vocal center of protest against the American position in Vietnam...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Toughminded and the Tenderminded | 3/9/1965 | See Source »

...four years after the victory, Rodriguez edited the party daily Hoy, always seemed to turn up close to Castro on the podium at important functions, outranked only by Little Brother Raul, Che Guevara and Bias Roca. In 1962 Rodriguez took over from Fidel as agrarian-reform director and boss of the island's sugar industry-in effect Cuba's economic czar. As Cuba's econ omy continued to fall apart and Castro's relations with Moscow cooled, Rodriguez lost some of his power-over the fishing industry, water resources, and finally the whole sugar industry...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cuba: Down with the Old Guard | 2/26/1965 | See Source »

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