Box 301
Restricted
Contains 26 Results:
1976 Presidential Campaign, Topics and Issues, Federal Election Commission, January, 1976
Topics include Buckley v. Valeo Supreme Court case and Supreme Court justice opinions in Buckley v. Valeo.
1976 Presidential Campaign, Topics and Issues, Federal Election Commission, February-July, 1976
Topics include clippings, Buckley v. Valeo decision, memoranda, and correspondence.
1976 Presidential Campaign, Topics and Issues, Food, [1974-1976]
Topics include clippings, food prices, food monopolies, position statements, statement drafts, position papers, "Hunger in America-A Look at the Domestic and International Food Crisis" by Guy Covallo, press releases, and Food Day.
1976 Presidential Campaign, Topics and Issues, Food, 1973-1974
Topics include "The Case of: Food Price Blackmail" (booklet), "Food, Farmers, Corporation, Earl Butz
1976 Presidential Campaign, Topics and Issues, Food, January-April, 1975
1976 Presidential Campaign, Topics and Issues, Food, July-December, 1975
Topics include "Economic Report on Food Chain Profits, World Food Crisis (S. Con. Res. 66), The Elements October issue, and food statistics.
1976 Presidential Campaign, Topics and Issues, Ford Motor Company, [1974-1976]
Topics include notes, monopolies, and financial information.
1976 Presidential Campaign, Topics and Issues, Foreign Aid, [1975-1976]
Topics include "Foreign Aid: The Flawed Dream" Philadelphia Inquirer (newspaper) special series, WIN November 13 issue, Vietnam, and clippings.
1976 Presidential Campaign, Topics and Issues, Foreign Policy, [1974-1976]
Topics include military budget, clippings, and correspondence. Correspondents include Paul McClosky, Jr.
1976 Presidential Campaign, Topics and Issues, Foreign Policy, 1972-1974
Topics include "No First Use of Nuclear Weapons" (Robert Ullman article), Leonard Woodcock statement on the Trade Reform Act, "Campaign for a Democratic Foreign Policy" (booklet), Vance Hartke testimony on the Foreign Trade and Investment Act, and "Labor and International Affairs" (Leonard Woodcock speech).