Word: restricted
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Thus, for better or worse, the U.S. must prepare for increasing airline competition from abroad. The main hope for U.S. lines is not to try to restrict competition but to outrace it by faster aircraft, lower fares, more and better flights, food and service. As in everything else, the businessman who pleases most of the customers most of the time inevitably walks off with most of the business...
...step farther. Said he: "The time may soon be coming when Congress may have to apply the same antitrust laws to the big unions as it does to corporations." Thus Bill Knowland, recognizing the growing public disgust at corruption among labor leaders, walked front and center on a firm restrict-unions platform...
...newspaper, magazine and broadcasting representatives invited to discuss the situation, Dulles modified his previous proposal (TIME, May 6) for pooled coverage by a limited number of "responsible" correspondents and offered to lift the ban for ten to 15 newsmen for a six-month trial period. His aim: to restrict China coverage to the twelve* news-gathering organizations that had correspondents on the mainland before the Communists took over...
...builders is to grow cautious with size and success. But Ernest Tener Weir, who built his National Steel Corp. into a $675 million empire, never seemed to have a cautious moment. In defense of the free-enterprising society that gave him his chance, he loudly fought all attempts to restrict its liberties. He staunchly resisted the U.S. Government, unions, even his fellow steelmasters. Praised and berated by liberals and conservatives alike, Ernest Weir was a non-organization man, a symbol of rugged individualism...
...anything bothers the liquor industry more than teetotalers, it is the legal taboos that restrict its advertising copy. While many an industry from cereals to soap touts its product as a boon to health or happiness, distillers are barred by Internal Revenue's Alcohol and Tobacco Tax Division from using "any advertisement which creates the impression that distilled spirits will contribute to the mental or physical well-being of the consumer, or may be consumed, even in moderate quantities, without any detrimental effect." Last week there were signs that the industry is getting around the law with ads discreetly...