Word: unfairness
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...opinion, your article on smokeless tobacco [MEDICINE, July 15] was short on facts and long on emotionalism and innuendo. You totally ignored the large body of public testimony by eminent medical experts about the lack of scientific justification for health-warning labels on the products. I thought it was unfair and unbalanced reporting of a complex and important issue. TIME readers deserve better. Louis F. Bantle, Chairman U.S. Tobacco Greenwich, Conn...
...that is stirring increasing resentment around the globe. Announcing a package of measures designed to lower trade barriers, Nakasone pledged to make Japan the freest market in the world. Said he: "I personally will hold myself responsible that enough will be done to satisfy international complaints that Japan is unfair in the trade area. We have taken very bold steps. We have done our best...
...these guys aren’t artists, they’re just musicians.” Those are difficult terms to define, of course, and most who use them in such a context don’t bother to, but I think they’re unfair. The music industry is nothing like it was forty years ago (this is beyond common knowledge), and the mass-manufacture model which came into effect in the 1960s when it became clear that shipping 1,000,000 albums from one printing across the world was no longer science fiction—that model...
...however temporarily, in the early months of its second term. "The damage is done," said a White House adviser. "It hurts. It adds to the 'insensitivity' problem." Reagan, in turn, was said to be "frustrated" and "a bit angry." Explained an aide: "He thinks the press coverage has been unfair." Vanishing was the hope that the storm would subside before Reagan leaves April 30 on a ten-day trip to Europe. He will make appearances in Germany before and after the annual economic summit of the seven major industrialized democracies (May 2 to 4 in Bonn), visit Spain and Portugal...
...editorial “Unhappy Harvard” (Apr. 5) points to the social dissatisfaction facing Harvard undergraduates. Even some of the faculty, remembering our own long-ago college experiences, are surprised by the poverty of partying on this campus. Yet it is unfair to claim that “Cambridge lacks a social scene for students below or just above the legal drinking age—namely undergrads,” and it is downright peculiar not to mention Boston as a possible destination for socializing...