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Unshielding the Bureaucrats

October 18, 1975
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Maria Sanchez and her neighbors in adjoining apartments were concerned about an abandoned build­ing next door at 2639 W. Haddon Ave., in Chicago.It was strewn with broken glass, foundations were badly cracked, floors buckled, exterior doors missing and rats every­where.THE OWNER of this sag­ging structure was the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. One…

A Progressive Auto Group

October 4, 1975
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Ever since the introduc­tion of the farm tractor in the 1920’s, farmers have suffered the economic abuse of the giant oil companies. But, unlike their urban consumer counterparts, they fought back by forming farmer-owned oil cooperatives. Starting with coopera­tively owned filling stations and bulk storage plants, they gradually introduced the cooperative idea into oil-product distribution,…

Co-Ops Can Save Energy

September 27, 1975
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Ever since the introduc­tion of the farm tractor in the 1920’s, farmers have suffered the economic abuse of the giant oil companies. But, unlike their urban consumer counterparts, they fought back by forming farmer-owned oil cooperatives. Starting with coopera­tively owned filling stations and bulk storage plants, they gradually introduced the cooperative idea into oil-product distribution,…

“Fed” Needs Auditing

September 16, 1975
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Question: What is it that would cost the public less than a million dollars a year but is driving multi-billion-dollar banks and cor­porations frantic? Answer: H.R. 7590, a bill to provide for an­nual congressional audit of the giant Federal Reserve System. With the vote by the House of Represen­tatives on this legislation expected within the…

Change In Tactics Needed

September 16, 1975
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In the escalating veto war between Gerald Ford and the Congress, it is time to ask why the White House is so far ahead in its strategic use of that presidential authority compared to the naive and unimaginative measures pursued by the Congress to override it. Through the use of intricate power plays, White House…

A Startling Fish Story

September 13, 1975
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U.S. and foreign fishery firms are harvesting about one fifth of the fish resources available on an annually renewable basis off our shores. This startling fact, contained in a recent General Accounting Office (GAO) report, contrasts starkly with the worsening news about world hunger and rising meat prices in this country and abroad. How can…

Look Out, Arthur Burns!

September 6, 1975
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Question: What is it that would cost the public less than a million dollars a year but is driving multibillion-dollar banks and corporations frantic? Answer: HR7590, a bill to provide for annual congres­sional audit of the giant Federal Reserve System. WITH THE VOTE by the House of Representatives on this legislation expected within the month,…

Improving the Labor Press

August 30, 1975
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Earlier this year, a stream of letters from workers at the Dow Chemi­cal plant in Michigan pour­ed into senatorial offices to protest the bill that would require safeguards for toxic chemical substances. Inspired and guided by Dow executives, these workers wrote their sena­tors because management had led them to believe that jobs would be lost…

Some Sense From GM

August 23, 1975
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I’ve come across a General Motors statement that finally makes sense! It has nothing to do with automobiles or the ways they are built. Rather, it describes a vast source of practical energy that grows annually in this country and is left on the farm after harvest —the non-edible parts of plants such as cornstalks…

Indifference to “Suite” Crimes

August 16, 1975
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You would think that, in the midst of the nation’s largest disclosed corporate crime wave, Washington would be replete with focused concern and corrective action. Not so. Look at the scene of indifference: 1. There are no congressional investigations planned on business crime and the need for stronger laws and more enforcement resources and prosecutorial…