Word: labelers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...drawn into the Bobby Baker mess: "I think every man is entitled to a fair trial, and I would like to see what conclusion is reached and what the evidence shows-with which I am not familiar-before I would make a judgment." And how would he label...
...make sure that the lesson sticks with the label, mothers are advised to take their kids on a tour of the house and let the youngsters themselves have the fun of pasting on the labels...
...special FTC hearing in Room 532. For the next three days, Congressmen, Governors, doctors, lawyers and businessmen argued an issue that is of overwhelming concern to the nation's $8 billion tobacco industry and its 70 million customers. The issue: Can the FTC force the cigarette companies to label every one of their packages and advertisements with an explicit warning that cigarettes are harmful...
...Labels. Under the law as it stood from 1938 through 1962, manufacturers merely had to satisfy FDA that drugs were safe. Whether they did any good was none of FDA's business. The new law requires manufacturers to prove effectiveness as well as safety, and FDA can demand proof of effectiveness, even if a drug has been prescribed millions of times. FDA has now told manufacturers it will require them to 1) report which pre-1963 drugs are still on the market, and how they are labeled and promoted; 2) show that doctors' experience with each drug justifies...
...high. The 1959 strike failed to shut down the city's existing dailies, the Journal and the Oregonian, thus denying the newcomer the opportunity to exploit a temporary news vacuum. Moreover, Portland readers seemed undisposed to support a union paper that tried so hard to avoid the union label that it packed as much punch as a Sunday supplement. Although the Oregonian and the Journal have together lost 79,000 in circulation since the strike, the tabloid Reporter could not even attract all those defectors. At death it had barely 58,000 in paid readership...