Word: permit
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...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...
...Government lawyer, Brownell charged Bergson had prosecuted a price-fixing and monopoly suit against the Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co. and the Carborundum Co., and had refused to permit the U.S. Pipe Line Co. to offer price differentials to oil shippers on a proposed new pipeline. Later, as a private attorney, Bergson got a Justice Department clearance for a merger between Minnesota Mining and Carborundum (which did not take place), and worked out a method of getting the price differential permission for U.S. Pipe Line by guaranteeing that no shipper would use more than 20% of the line's capacity...
April 1951--applied for military permit and passort for sabbatical in Japan. Aug. 14-first mentioned before McCarran Committee. Aug. 17-Army refused military permit; passort application therefore lapsed. I resumed teaching, asked Army for a hearing. Dec. 5-6-Army set up its Military Entry Permit review Board (two civilians and a general, using Loyalty-Security Board rules) and I had the first hearing held by it. March 10-11, 1952-having asked for a hearing in September, I appeared before, McCarran Committee 9rranscript free in vol. 11 of hearings on the Institute of Pacific relations, Internal security Submission...
Fairbank first applied for a military permit and a passport in April 1951. After being mentioned in a McCarran Committee hearing, Fairbank was refused a military permit, and his passport application lapsed...
...wagon train past the redskins, and as usual they do, but only after the routine game of ring-around-a-rosy, with many an Indian biting the dust. The action is somewhat confused in this one by a chicken-pox epidemic that serves little purpose except to permit the audience and the hero (Guy Madison) to peek down the blouse of the heroine (Joan Weldon) while she is being vaccinated. The WarnerColor is pretty, too, and in stereophonic sound, the arrows seem to zip alarmingly right past the moviegoer's ear and plunge into the screen...