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The Media is Becoming a Tool of the Established Powers

May 6, 1985
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Before and after the Public Broadcasting System (PBS) was established with Congressional funding in the late Sixties, right wing ideologues were on the attack. PBS was, in their view, a radical, leftist television network. Reaction: PBS took on a weekly discussion show hosted by William F. Buckley which continues to this day. There is still…

We Need to Rediscover Anti-Trust Laws’ Benefit to Businesses

April 15, 1985
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Back in 1890 a Republican Congress passed the first federal anti-monopoly law and called it the Sherman Anti-trust Act. Today the Republicans in the White House and the Congress seemed to have forgotten that this law and the Clayton Anti-trust act of 1914 are the principal defenders of competition in interstate commerce. The tidal wave…

Bulgaria: An International ‘Pulsating Hub of Humor’?

April 8, 1985
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To most people the town of Gabrovo, Bulgaria does not exactly induce intimations of hilarity. But the jovial Gabrovians would say that’s because you have not been there. Gabrovo? Bulgaria? When? From May 18 to May 25, 1965 opens the Third International Festival of Comedy and Satirical Films during the Seventh International Biennial of Humor…

The Corporate Tax Holiday is Ending

April 5, 1985
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Judging by the growing convergence of influential conservative and liberal forces, the bottom has about fallen out of the corporate tax loophole industry. From the Treasury Department to Cong. Jack Kemp (R-NY) to right wing columnist James J. Kilpatrick, the calls are mounting for making corporations pay their fair share of taxes. There is more…

94-Year Old Journalist Completes ‘the Work of a Lifetime’

March 18, 1985
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A few days ago I called up a journalist in Vermont who has interviewed William Jennings Bryan, Teddy Roosevelt, Lenin and Mussolini, among others. George Seldes, age 94, is working on his umpteenth book to be called “Adventures with People: The Noted, the Notorious and the three S.O.B’s.” Next month his magnum opus, “The Great…

Tribute to American Heroes William Haddon and Henry Wakeland

March 11, 1985
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It has been said that the young have few heroes today, but that may be so because many of the heroes there are in America remain unsung and unsuitable for the required antics that attract mass media attention. Two such stalwarts in the modern history of of motor vehicle safety were Dr. William Haddon, Jr.,…

GM Saturn Plant

March 4, 1985
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It was a dramatic display of corporate power over political obeisance. The subject on the Phil Donahue Show recently was General Motor’s (GM) new Saturn plant, featuring GM Chairman, Roger Smith, and six Governors who have been furiously bidding to have the company locate the plant in their state. Roger Smith came on first with…

Taste, Decorum Need to be Applied to Nation’s Historical Leaders

February 25, 1985
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Every year around his birthday, business firms seem bent on giving George Washington more careers. In Boston recently our first President was seen on television repeatedly selling Datsuns. In New York City, he was pushing carpets. Around the nation’s capital, he was seen telling readers of the Washington Post that “Leasing is a revolutionary New…

GM Seat Belt Drive Merely a Smoke Screen to Kill Air Bags

February 18, 1985
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General Motors, with the backing of “government off your backs” Ronald Reagan, is lobbying to enact mandatory seat belt use laws in dozens of states. Using his own agents and working through front groups, GM’s Chairman, Roger Smith, whose company once opposed mandatory three point seat belt installation in the late Sixties, privately boasts that…

Reagan Has No Time To Help Keep Schoolchildren Healthy

February 11, 1985
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It’s a confrontation between a labor union and the Reagan government, but this time the issue is not wages; it is asbestos danger in 30,000 American school a. The Service Employees International Union is suing the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to ask the federal court to require the agency to establish standards for the performance…