About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 52. Chapters: Cartel, Price fixing, Collusion, Vendor lock-in, George Howard Earle, Jr., Tying, Predatory pricing, Dumping, Competition regulator, Fixed Book Price Agreement, Resale price maintenance, Price fixing cases, Barriers to entry, Baseball collusion, Lysine price-fixing conspiracy, Venero Mangano, OREC, Angelgate, Semiconductor consolidation, Suggested retail price, Deference, Restraint of trade, Anti-competitive practices, Anti-siphoning laws in Australia, American Antitrust Institute, Osteopathic Physicians & Surgeons v. California Medical Association, Institute for Consumer Antitrust Studies, Bid rigging, Ernest "Junior" Varacalli, Patent misuse, Field-of-use limitation, Copyright misuse, Pacman conjecture, Coase conjecture, Net Book Agreement, Limit price, Unilateral Policy, DRAM price fixing, Conscious parallelism, Lang Law, Vertical restraints, Bathtub Trust, Refusal to deal, Transports Schiocchet Excursions, Good Neighbour Policy, Exclusive dealing, Social dumping, Market allocation scheme, Group boycott, Ringfencing, Market abuse, Killer bees, Third line forcing, Dividing territories, Horizontal territorial allocation, Crown Jewel Defense. Excerpt: George H. Earle, Jr. (July 6, 1856 - February 19, 1928) was a Philadelphia lawyer and "financial diplomat" who was highly sought after to save ailing corporations from financial ruin. Earle was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Grandson of noted abolitionist and philanthropist, Thomas Earle, and only son to Philadelphia lawyer George H. Earle, Sr. and Mrs. Frances ("Fanny") Van Leer Earle, he gained notoriety for his abilities as a "business doctor"-having turned around many organizations from the brink of financial ruin after being appointed as receiver and reorganizer. A Harvard University graduate (1879), Earle became a member of the Philadelphia bar-following in ...