Word: enjoins
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Government lost its suit to enjoin the New York Coffee ant Sugar Exchange. Four Federal judges refused to grant the requested injunction against trading in sugar futures, on the ground that no conspiracy in violation of the Sherman Act or the Wilson Tariff Act was revealed. Attorney General Daugherty announced his intention of appealing the decision to the U. S. Supreme Court. Meanwhile U. S. District Attorney Hayward has issued subpoenas upon sugar brokers to produce their books before the Federal Grand Jury, with the implication that a Grand Jury investigation into the sugar market was projected, although aimed...
...Massachusetts was decided the great question of the right of a professor to control the notes of his lectures. All the defendants in an action brought by professors in the Harvard Law School to enjoin the sale of their notes consented to the entry of a decree against them and were ordered to pay damages...
...ruling of the Interstate Commerce Commission that railroads should offer 2,500 mile transportation books for $72 (ordinary price $90) is strongly opposed by the railroads. Eastern roads, with the exception of the Baltimore and Ohio, made a protest before the United States District Court of Massachusetts to enjoin the Commission from enforcing the order. The Baltimore and Ohio joined with western and southern roads in petitioning the Interstate Commerce Commission for rehearing on the question of mileage books. Last week the Commission refused a rehearing. Now the question of mileage books rests on the outcome of the case...
...bill in equity brought by Professors J. H. Beale '82, A. W. Scott '09, E. H. Warren '95 and Samuel Williston '82 of the Law School, to enjoin H. T. Lawrence, G. D. Chase, and T. H. Hynes, the first two former students in the University, from printing and selling their lecture notes, came up before Judge Crosby in the Supreme Court in Boston yesterday afternoon...
...Provide Clod-Shoes at the Entrance. Some students derive such subtle pleasure from hearing the reading hall resound with the click-click of their hob-nails on the marble edgings that we ought not to enjoin them to walk softly, but, rather, we ought to furnish them with clod-hoppers, the more to indulge that subtle pleasure...