| United States. Supreme Court - 1940 - 828 lapas
...is not the purpose of the Act to protect a licensee against competition but to protect the public. Congress intended to leave competition in the business...ability to make his programs attractive to the public. This is not to say that the question of competition between a proposed station and one operating under... | |
| United States. Supreme Court - 1940 - 1096 lapas
...is not the purpose of the Act to protect a licensee against competition but to protect the public. Congress intended to leave competition in the business...ability to make his programs attractive to the public. This is not to say that the question of competition between a proposed station and one operating under... | |
| United States. Federal Communications Commission - 1941 - 182 lapas
...prices, finances, or other matters for the principle of free competition. But in regulating radio, "Congress intended to leave competition in the business of broadcasting where it found it." 2 It has long been a basic hypothesis of the American system that competition in a free market best... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce - 1947 - 690 lapas
...would mean that the Commission's function is to grant a monopoly in the field of broadcasting." Again, "Congress intended to leave competition in the business...ability to make his programs attractive to the public." I believe firmly in this principle. To permit those alleging economic injury, without more, to contest... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce - 1947 - 694 lapas
...would mean that the Commission's function is to grant a monopoly in the field of broadcasting." Again, "Congress intended to leave competition in the business...ability to make his programs attractive to the public." I believe firmly in this principle. To permit those alleging economic injury, •without more, to contest... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce - 1955 - 102 lapas
...is not the purpose of the act to protect a licensee against competition hut to protect the public. Congress intended to leave competition in the business...ability to make his programs attractive to the public (309 US 470 (1940) ). This language seemed to lay at rest an yserious contention that a broadcaster... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Commerce - 1955 - 1720 lapas
...is not the purpose of the act to protect a licensee against competition but to protect the public. Congress intended to leave competition in the business...ability to make his programs attractive to the public" (the Sanders case, 309 .US 470 (1940)). Experience has shown that section 309 (c) demands an undue... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce - 1955 - 102 lapas
...is not the purpose of the act to protect a licensee against competition but to protect the public. Congress intended to leave competition in the business...ability to make his programs attractive to the public" (the Sanders case, 300 US 470 (1940) ). Experience has shown that section 809 (c) demands an undue... | |
| United States. Attorney General's National Committee to Study the Antitrust Laws - 1955 - 416 lapas
...is not the purpose of the Act to protect a licensee against competition but to protect the public. Congress intended to leave competition in the business...broadcasting where it found it, to permit a licensee who is not interfering electrically with other broadcasters to survive or succumb according to his ability... | |
| United States. Attorney General's National Committee to Study the Antitrust Laws - 1955 - 418 lapas
...is not the purpose of the Act to protect a licensee against competition but to protect the public. Congress intended to leave competition in the business...broadcasting where it found it, to permit a licensee who is not interfering electrically with other broadcasters to survive or succumb according to his ability... | |
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