Word: sanctions
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...safety." In such cases, the board recommended, the President should be empowered to: 1) appoint an emergency board which, as is now the case with the regulated railroads and airlines, would mediate the dispute and recommend settlement terms; 2) order an 80-day strike postponement without asking court sanction, as the Taft-Hartley law now requires; 3) go to Congress and ask for specific remedial action. All this would require a major overhaul of U.S. labor law and would mean further Government intervention in collective bargaining. Yet. of the six businessmen on the board, only Henry Ford II* publicly dissented...
These men were never meant to do Mr. Pusey's job for him. If the President continues to look for sanction in history and tradition, he might remember that powerful and imaginative executive leadership, is of all Harvard's traditions one of the strongest...
Once the majority of people in a village have been won, the Viet Minh use social pressures or terrorist sanction to enlist the support of the rest. By carefully choosing their targets of assassination, the Viet Cong guerillas combine political and military maneuvers. (If the 1500 killed a month by guerillas, a good many are unpopular local officials...
...rages of the American political system. And as with the segregation issue, there is no remedy but Court action. As Justice Clark put it, "It is well for this court to practice self-restraint and discipline . . . but never in its history have those principles received sanction where the national rights of so many have been so clearly infringed for so long a time...
...member disclosed that the Boston chapter of Turn Toward Peace has set April 21 as the date for a small local peace march. However, Tocsin last night withheld its official sanction of the action...