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Iacocca Warns Public of Danger in GM-Toyota Deal

February 16, 1984
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Washington, DC — Two automobile company bosses came to town last week to speak and never were their messages more different from one another.First there was Roger Smith, the head of General Motors, addressing the National Press Club. In his entire speech text of 16 pages, not once did he refer to his company’s products.…

The President Said What?

February 1, 1984
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Presidents usually grace their annual State of the Union address before Congress with several servings of stirring language. But this year Ronald Reagan filled his address with soaring rhetoric which camouflaged falsehoods behind politically cunning expressions designed to keep hope springing eternal. Reagan wants people to see him as a new prophet who, promptly from…

The Unanswered Grace Report

January 31, 1984
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Is there a Party of the opposition anymore? Each new year makes this question increasingly insistent. During the first two weeks of January the Reagan regime had a virtual media field day to itself, while leading Democrats were elsewhere or occupied with tearing into Mondale. Two cases are illustrative. Presidential counselor Edwin Meese III, with…

Government Could Become Nation’s Shrewdest Consumer

January 30, 1984
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Gerald P. Carmen, Reagan’s administrator of the General Services Administration (GSA) is a bit nervous these days. You see, I have praised him publicly and his Reaganite friends won’t let him forget that. But as head of the country’s biggest consumer buying operation, he deserves praise and wider notice for the way he is using…

Censored Broadcasts

January 14, 1984
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Mark Fowler wants to take away from you the last remaining rights to have access to public property — namely the public airwaves, unless, that is, you happen to own a radio or television station. Who is Mark Fowler? He is the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, the darling of the broadcasting industry and…

Honoring 11 Dedicated Consumer Advocates of 1983

December 22, 1983
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It is at the end of a year that one more easily thinks of constancy — defined by Webster as “steadfastness of mind under duress.” I think of those public citizens who year after year stay on the course against large odds in order to fight for justice in America. They work out of a…

Illiteracy — Public Schools

December 16, 1983
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A few years ago the Washington Post carried a series of articles on the failure of the local school system to teach students how to read and write. The reporter’s most stunning finding: more than a few high school seniors relied on their classmates to read the signs on the Metro bus so that they…

Air Bag Hearings: Safety on the Road

December 9, 1983
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Safety has the highest mandate in her administration, says Transportation Secretary, Elizabeth Hanford Dole. She then fails to preside over three days of Departmental hearings three blocks from her office in Washington on the most important safety decision she will be making — the automobile crash protection proposal. Granted she did appear at earlier hearings…

Ronald Reagan Reign of Error

December 2, 1983
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“Politics is just like show business. You have a hell of an opening, coast for a while, and then have a hell of a close.” So said Ronald Reagan to his consultant, Stuart Spencer,in 1966 as he started his gubernatorial career in California. With such an attitude a politician can develop a highly refined sense…

AT&T

November 22, 1983
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Your telephone companies, led by AT&T, are telling you that a major reason why they have to double or triple your monthly residential telephone bill is because long distance rates will no longer subsidize local service after January 1, 1984. That is the date when AT&T’s long distance unit splits from the soon-to-be independent regional…