NYSA TI Single-Page 1
Vol. XXX No. 41 Pages 2481-2592 The 1972
Abstract
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Fields
- Named Organization
- AFL-CIO (American Federation of Labor/Congress of Industrial Organiza)Labor Union
- Agriculture Department (USDA)
- Air Force
- American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- American Bar Association
- American Civil Liberties Union
- American Red Cross
- Anheuser-Busch
- Appropriations Committee
- Army
- Ball State University
- Black Hills Corp.
- Blaylock (PR Consulting Firm)
- Blue Cross Blue Shield
- Boeing (Aircraft manufacturer)
- Boise Cascade
- Boston University
- Bowling Green State University
- Brown University
- Bureau of Reclamation
- California Institute of Technology
- *California State University (several, specify city)
- Catholic War Veterans
- Central Michigan University
- Chamber of Commerce
- Chapel Hill
- Chevrolet (Automobile Manufacturer)
- Coast Guard
- Colorado State University
- Columbia University
- Control Data Corporation
- Cornell University (Ithaca, New York)
- Council of Economic Advisers
- Council of State Governments
- Creighton University
- Dartmouth College
- Daughters of the American Revolution
- Davidson College
- Democratic National Committee (Democratic National Committee)
- Department of Defense (DOD)
- *Department of Labor (use United States Department of Labor)
- Dow Chemical Co. (Marketed Nicoderm patch)Dow Chemical is a 72% owner of its Marion Merrell Dow Inc. unit in 1994 (WSJ 7/29/94). Marion Merrell Dow markets Nicoderm brand nicotine patch, used to help people stop smoking (Reuters 5/9/94).
- Duke University
- Eastman Kodak Co. (Kodak) (Cigarette filter mfg from 1950s to 1994.)Manufacturers of quality control equipment for cigarette packaging
- Emory University
- Farm Bureau
- Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
- Finance Committee
- Ford Foundation
- Ford Motor Company
- General Electric Company (appliance company)
- General Foods
- General Mills
- General Motors Corporation
- George Washington University
- Georgetown University
- Hampden-Sydney College
- Harpers (Magazine)
- Harvard University
- Hershey
- Honeywell
- House of Representatives
- Howard University
- Idaho State University
- Illinois State University
- Indiana University (Located in Bloomington, Indiana)
- Interior Department
- International Harvester
- Iowa State University
- John Deere
- Justice Department
- Kansas State University
- Knights of Columbus
- Louisiana State University
- Marine Corps
- McLane
- Michigan State University
- Mississippi State University
- Montana State University
- Motorola
- Narcotics Education, Inc.
- NASA
- National City Corp.
- National Guard
- Navy
- Nebraska Wesleyan University
- North Carolina State University
- Oak Ridge National LaboratoryContract research lab; does gov't work and also takes private contracts.
- Ohio University
- Opinion Research Corporation
- Phi Beta Kappa
- Piney Woods
- Portland State University
- Postmaster General
- Princeton University
- Providence Hospital
- Purdue University
- Ralston Purina
- Redstone Arsenal
- Republican Party
- Research Council
- Rochester Institute of Technology
- Rural Development
- Rutgers University
- Salvation Army
- Senate
- Sigma (Plastic bag manufacturer)
- Small Business Administration (SBA)
- Smithsonian Institution
- Southern Illinois University
- Southwestern University
- Sperry
- Stanford University
- State Department
- State University of New York
- State University of New York at Albany
- Tennessee Valley Authority
- Texas A & M University
- Tobacco Advisory Council (TAC) (Tobacco lobbying group in U.K.)Association of UK cigarette manufacturers
- Trinity University
- Tulane University
- U.S. Steel
- Union Carbide
- United Auto Workers
- United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW)
- United Nations
- University of Alabama
- *University of California (use specific branch)
- University of California at Los Angeles
- University of Chicago
- University of Colorado
- University of Delaware
- University of Denver
- University of Florida
- University of Hamburg
- University of Illinois (at Champaign-Urbana)
- University of Iowa
- University of Kansas
- University of Kentucky
- University of Louisville
- University of Maryland
- University of Michigan
- University of Minnesota
- University of Mississippi
- University of Missouri
- University of Nebraska
- University of North Carolina
- University of North Dakota
- University of Ohio
- University of Oklahoma
- University of Oregon
- University of South Dakota
- University of Southern California
- University of Tennessee
- University of Texas
- University of Virginia
- University of Wisconsin
- University of Wyoming
- US Army
- White House
- Willamette University
- Xerox
- Yale University
- Named Person
- Abernethy, Thomas G.
- Albert, Carl
- Anderson, Clinton P.
- Anderson, Forrest H.
- Anderson, Glenn M.
- Anderson, John B.
- Ashbrook, John M.
- Aspinall, Wayne N.
- Babbitt, Wayne H.
- Baker, Howard H (Senate Majority Leader, Pro-Tobacco Industry)
- Baker, Howard H., Jr.
- Baker, Lamar
- Bartlett, Dewey F.
- Beach, Myrtle
- Beard, Robin L., Jr.
- Belcher, Page Henry (Congressman (Oklahoma - R))
- Birch, John
- Bishop, John J.
- Blanton, Ray
- Boggs, J. Caleb
- Bond, Kit
- Botts, Jackson E.
- Bowen, David R.
- Bowen, John F.
- Bowen, Otis R. M.D. (Dept. of Health & Human Services, Secretary (1986-88))Plaintiff
- Brooke, Edward W.
- Broomfield, William S.
- Bryan, William Jennings
- Buckley, James L.
- Bumpers, Dale
- Burke, J. Herbert
- Byford, Charles H.
- Byrne, James A.
- Carey, Hugh L.
- Case, Clifford P.
- Chang, Benjamin
- Chappell, Bill, Jr.
- Christian, Zane Dale
- Clark, Dick
- Cleveland, Lester Dean
- Cochran, Thad
- Coleman, Robert J.
- Conlan, John B.
- Connally, John B.
- Conover, William S.
- Conroy, Edward T.
- Cooper, Daniel S.
- Cooper, John Sherman
- Coover, Morris
- Crowley, Roger J., Jr.
- Culver, John C.
- Curtis, Carl T.
- Daniels, Jack
- Davis, Deane C.
- Davis, John W.
- Delee, Victoria
- Dennis, David W.
- Desimone, Herbert F.
- Detemple, Patrick M.
- Dorn, Bryan
- Dow, John G.
- Dowdy, John
- Droney, John J.
- Dwyer, Florence P.
- Eastland, James O.
- Ebert, Ida
- Edmondson, Ed
- Edwards, Edwin L.
- Edwards, Edwin W.
- Ellender, Allen J.
- Esch, Marvin L.
- Evans, Daniel J.
- Fonda, Jane
- Ford, Wendell
- Forsythe, Edwin B.
- Froehlich, Harold V.
- Gambrell, David H.
- George, Prince
- Gilman, Benjamin A.
- Goldwater, Barry
- Goldwater, Barry M.
- Gordon, Harold B.
- Griffin, Charles H.
- Griffin, Robert P.
- Gunter, William D., Jr.
- Guy, William L.
- Halpern, Seymour
- Hamilton, Lee H.
- Hannaford, Peter D.
- Hansen, Clifford P.
- Hansen, Orval
- Harbor, Pearl
- Harlan, Doug
- Harris, Fred R.
- Haskell, Floyd K.
- Hatfield, Mark O.
- Hathaway, William D.
- Hawkins, John C.
- Hays, Wayne L.
- Helms, Jesse (U.S. Senator, (R-North Carolina))Strongly pro-tobacco
- Helms, Jesse A.
- Hewgley, James M., Jr.
- Hibbard, Henry S.
- Higgins, T. David
- Hirsch, Robert
- Horan, Robert F., Jr.
- Huddleston, Walter D. "Dee" (Senator (D-KY))Defense
- Humphrey III, Hubert H (Attorney General, Minnesota)
- Jackson, Henry M.
- James, Leo E.
- Jarman, John
- Johnson, Lyndon B.
- Johnston, J. Bennett, Jr.
- Jonas, Charles Raper
- Jones, Franklin C.
- Jordan, B. Everett
- Jordan, Len B.
- Joseph, John
- Judge, Thomas L.
- Karth, Joseph E.
- Kay, Morris
- Kee, James
- Kelley, Frank J.
- Kelly, J. Michael
- Kennedy, Edward M.
- Kennedy, John Fitzgerald (U. S. President, 1961-1963)
- Kennedy, Robert F.
- Kerry, John F.
- Kidd, Bill
- Kneip, Richard F.
- Krebs, Paul J.
- Kuykendall, Dan
- Landgrebe, Earl F.
- Leflore, John L.
- Lennon, Alton
- Leonard, Louise
- Licht, Frank
- Link, Arthur A.
- Lloyd, Sherman P.
- Lowe, Bob
- Lowry, Thomas C.
- Lyon, Frederick D.
- Macchio, Nicholas R., Jr.
- Madden, Ray J.
- Madigan, Edward R.
- Mailliard, William S.
- Mandel, Marvin
- Marcucci, Joseph P.
- Mccammon, Lewis
- Mcclellan, John L.
- Mccloskey, Paul N., Jr.
- Mcclure, James A.
- Mccormack, Mike
- Mcculloch, William M.
- Mcdade, Joseph M.
- Mcdonald, Jack H.
- McGovern, George
- Mcgrath, Robert V.
- Mcintyre, Thomas J.
- Mckeithen, John J.
- Mckevitt, Mike
- Mcmillan, John L.
- Meeds, Lloyd
- Meier, Henry
- Melcher, John
- Merritt, Paul M.
- Metcalf, Lee
- Michelman, Harvey J.
- Miller, George P.
- Miller, Jack
- Minish, Joseph G.
- Mondale, Walter F.
- Morse, Wayne L.
- Mundt, Karl E.
- Murphy, Joseph
- Myers, John T.
- Nixon, Richard Milhous (U.S. President, 1969-1974)
- Nunn, Louie B.
- Nunn, Sam
- Obey, David R.
- Ogilvie, Richard B.
- Olson, Larry H.
- Paradis, Dorothy D.
- Parish, Jefferson
- Park, Franklin
- Patten, Edward J.
- Pearson, James B.
- Percy, Charles H.
- Peterson, Russell W.
- Peterson, Walter R.
- Pike, Otis G.
- Poff, Richard H.
- Powell, Adam C.
- Powell, Wesley
- Price, Robert
- Pryor, David
- Purcell, Graham
- Ramos, Manuel A.
- Rampton, Calvin L.
- Ray, Robert
- Rees, Thomas M.
- Riegle, Donald W., Jr.
- Rizzo, Frank
- Robison, Howard W.
- Rockefeller, Jay
- Rockefeller, Nelson A.
- Rogers, Paul G.
- Rooney, John J.
- Roush, J. Edward
- Rubin, Ellis S.
- Russo, Lawrence P.
- Saylor, John P.
- Scheuer, James H.
- Schmitz, John G.
- Scott, Lloyd
- Scott, Robert W.
- Scott, William Lloyd
- Shapiro, Michael
- Shipley, George E.
- Shoup, Richard G.
- Smith, Margaret Chase
- Smith, Neal
- Smith, Preston
- Solomon, Melvin
- Sparkman, John J.
- Spong, William B., Jr.
- Steckler, Ferne M.
- Steiger, Sam
- Stevens, Ted
- Stokes, Louis
- Strebe, Nancy
- Talmadge, Herman E.
- Taylor, Lyle
- Terry, John H.
- Thompson, Charles S.
- Thompson, Fletcher
- Thoresen, Walter
- Thurmond, James Strom (U.S. Senator from South Carolina, Dixiecrat candidate for pr)
- Toledano, Ben C.
- Tower, John G.
- Valley, Fernando
- Ventura, Nicholas
- Vergari, Carl A.
- Vilt, Thomas V.
- Wagner, Robert F.
- Walker, Daniel
- Wallace, George
- Wallace, George C.
- Walsh, Mike
- Ware, John
- Weeks, William D.
- Welsh, Matthew E.
- Witkowski, Charles S.
- Wolff, Lester L.
- Young, Edward L.
- Date Loaded
- 16 Mar 2005
- Box
- 5190
Document Images
the rich" who is not interested in the problems of the poor.
Ray points to his record as governor and says per-
formance, not rhetoric, must be judged by the voters.
Observers consider Ray a favorite in this Republican
state.
HOUSE
1st District (Southeast~Davenimrt, Burlington,
Iowa City). Includes rapidly growing industrial area
along Mississippi River, including large aluminum
and construction equipment firms. This has contributed
to organized labor's growing influence in district.
Large student population at University of Iowa in
Iowa City. Rural areas are devoted to hog. cattle
and feed grain production. Politically a tessup.
Republican. Incumbent Fred Schwengel, 65. Won
third consecutive term in ].970 with 49.8 percent of the
vote.
Democrat. Edward Mezvinsky, 35. an attorney
and former state representative from Iowa City.
American Independent. Lee E. Foster, Bettendorf.
Campaign. Schwengel lost his seat to a Democrat
in 1964 after serving five terms, but he regained it in
].966, Mezvinsky ran on the consumer issue in 1970 and lost
to Schwengel by 765 votes. He says that new blood is
necessary in Confess to fill human needs. Observers
expect another close contest.
2nd District (Northeast--Cedar Rapids, Du-
buque). Has number of food-processing plants, farm
machinery and construction machine~ factories.
Farming products include cattle, hogs and feed grain.
Democrats have considerable strength in cities.
Democrat, Incumbent John C. Culver, 40. Won
fourth term in 1970 with 60.5 percent of the vote.
Republican. State Rep, Theodore R. Ellsworth,
54, Dubuque.
Campaign. Culver has increased his winning per-
centage every election year since 1964 and is favored to
retain his seat.
3rd District (North Central--Waterloo). Mainly
agricultural, with feed grains, hogs, cattle and poul-
try main products. Waterloo has farm machinery and
meat-packing plants, Strongly Republican.
Republican. Incumbent H. R. Gross, 73. Won 12th
term in 1970 with 59 percent of the vote.
Democrat. Lyle Taylor. 38, a Waterloo farmer.
Campaign. Gross is expected to have little diffi-
culty defeating Taylor, In 1970, Taylor lost to Gross with
41 percent of the vote,
4th District (South CentralwDes Moines,
Ottumwa). Des Moines is state capital and major
city of district. Chief economic activities of city are
small industrial plants, insurance, government employ-
meat. Des Moines was heart of old 5th District. white
Ottumwa and several rural.small town counties to east
were in old 4th. The two areas were combined in redis-
tricting. Ottumwa is home of farm implement and meat-
packing plants. Other rural areas are concerned with
hog. cattle, corn production. About evenly divided
politically.
Republican. Incumbent John I,L Kyl, 53. Won th'~d
cnnsecutive term in 1970 with 54.6 percent of the v,~te.
Democrat. Rep. Neal Smith, 5% Won seventh
term in 1970 with 64.9 percent of the wge.
Midwest Outlooks - 8: Iowa, K~n.
Campaign. Smith, who represented the old 5th Dis-
trict, and Kyl were put in the same district as a result of
redistricting. Kyl was first elected to the House in 1960
but lost his seat in the 1964 Democratic landslide. He
regained his seat in 1966. With the addition of Democratic
areas in the district, Smith is considered a slight favorite,
but a close race is expected.
5th District (Southwest~Council Bluffs). A
rural-small town district almost wholly dependent on
agriculture--cattle, hogs, feed grains. Council
Bluffs is railroad and meat-packing center. Ames.
with Iowa State University, was added by redistrict-
ing. as were several Republican counties from old 4th
District. Should remain strongly Republican.
Republican. Incumbent William J. Scherle. 49. Won
third term in 1970 with 62.7 percent of the vote.
Democrat, Thomas Harkin, 32, aa Ames attorney
and a former aide to Rep. Neal Smith (D Iowa).
Campaign. Scherle. a conservative, is favored to
defeat Harkin.
6th District (Northwest~Sloux City, Fort
Dodge). Mainly agricultural, with same products as
in other districts. Pockets of Democratic strength in
Fort Dodge {added by redistricting), Sioux City and
some rural areas are not enough to overcome usual
Republican majority,
Republican. Incumbent Wiley P. Mayne, 55. Won
third term in 1970 with 57 percent of the vote.
Democrat. Berkley Bedell, 51, a Spirit Lake busi-
nessman.
Campaign. Mayne is believed to hold a substantial
lead over Bedell, a political novice.
KANSAS
(Primary results. Weekly Report p. 1923)
PRESIDENT
Kansas is Nixon country, and the President is ex-
pected to sweep the state. But McGovern's charges that
the administration tipped off major grain exporters so
they could reap huge profits on wheat sales to the Soviet
Union has had a decided effect on Kansas farmers who
harvested their wheat too early to benefit from the trade
agreement.
SENATE
Republican. Incumbent James B. Pearson. 52,
Prairie Village. Won first full term in 1966 with 52.3 per-
cent of the vote.
Democrat. Dr. Arch O. Tetzlaff, 46, Prairie Village.
an anesthesiologist.
Conservative. Glenn Miller, 40. Lawrence. a
former policeman and a chapter leader of the John
Birch Society,
Campaign. A year ago, Kansas observers ~'ould
have bet on the political demise of Pearson. anticipating
a challenge by Guy. Robert Docking (D). But Docking
decided to try again for the governorship, and Pearson
spent all his weekends mending fences. Now it appears
that Peamon will ha~e easy g~Lag against the liberal
net. 7. 1972~PAGE 2523
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