Word: restrictions
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...because the department has only a small number of tutors, it must restrict its size. Miss Crowe must face the people who are turned down. "That's kind of bad," she says...
...clientele and aggressively hold onto it. A German broker seldom phones his customers-and charges them 20 pfennigs for each call when he does-but the U.S. brokers are always on the phone with suggestions and send out as many as eight research reports a month. Many governments restrict trading in U.S. stocks; Britain imposes a 4¼% tax on it, and countries as diverse as Chile and Denmark flatly prohibit it. Imaginative investors, however, usually can slide around the restrictions. The main reason for their interest is that, despite the recent weakness, the U.S. stock market...
Varied Voluntaryism. For the moment at least, the Johnson Administration continues to rely most heavily in its fight against inflation on the guidelines that request both U.S. management and labor to restrict themselves-"voluntarily"-to price or wage increases of no more than 3.2% a year. The Administration has established two rather different varieties of voluntaryism. Whenever a major U.S. industry starts getting out of line on prices, Washington rams it back into place. When a union fractures the guidelines in its successful wage demands, the White House seems to be looking the other...
...hope that our Government will restrict our military operations in Viet Nam to the minimum necessary to assure the security of our forces and to maintain our military presence until we can achieve a satisfactory peaceful resolution of the conflict. There is more respect to be won in the opinion of this world by a resolute and courageous liquidation of unsound positions than by the most stubborn pursuit of extravagant or unpromising objectives...
...tarnish it, if we sully it, if we transmit it to the next generation in impaired form." Mansfield countered with harsh words. He decried "the resentments, the irritations, the vendettas and the whatevers against organized labor" that had prompted the talkathon. Noting the Senate's historic reluctance to restrict debate, Mansfield reasoned: "The Senate will not gag itself by voting to adopt cloture. On the contrary, if the Senate does adopt cloture, it will free itself from the passion and perversity which, since the end of the last session, have held this institution in a deadly strangle hold...