Farmworkers in Rural America, 1971-1972: Hearings, Ninety-second Congress, First and Second Session ...U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972 |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 52.
342. lappuse
... population in this country , the corporation can simply hold on , as they will in Central Valley . Those who have 50 and 100 thousand acres are entirely secure . Most of that land , with California growing the way it is , will some day ...
... population in this country , the corporation can simply hold on , as they will in Central Valley . Those who have 50 and 100 thousand acres are entirely secure . Most of that land , with California growing the way it is , will some day ...
357. lappuse
... population attrition . Business volume provided by farm families has been dropping steadily in America's agricultural midsection , where roughly every third farm- stead now is vacant.25 Although the subcommittee did not receive any ...
... population attrition . Business volume provided by farm families has been dropping steadily in America's agricultural midsection , where roughly every third farm- stead now is vacant.25 Although the subcommittee did not receive any ...
361. lappuse
... population that would accompany corporation farming - hired managers and migrant workers becoming predominant - would erode the quality of local government . Here is his statement : 85 There could be strong tendencies toward local ...
... population that would accompany corporation farming - hired managers and migrant workers becoming predominant - would erode the quality of local government . Here is his statement : 85 There could be strong tendencies toward local ...
377. lappuse
... population of middle - class persons with a high degree of stability in income and tenure , and a strong economic and social interest in their community . Differences in wealth among them are not great , and the people gen- erally ...
... population of middle - class persons with a high degree of stability in income and tenure , and a strong economic and social interest in their community . Differences in wealth among them are not great , and the people gen- erally ...
390. lappuse
... population . More than half the land area of the State of Maine , I am told - 52 percent is owned by about 12 corporations . And 80 percent of Maine's land area , by one estimate , is held by absentee owners . In 1969 , the largest ...
... population . More than half the land area of the State of Maine , I am told - 52 percent is owned by about 12 corporations . And 80 percent of Maine's land area , by one estimate , is held by absentee owners . In 1969 , the largest ...
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acres AMERICAN AGRICULTURE animal wastes antitrust broiler California capital gains cattle cent Chairman Colorado Committee conglomerate consumer cooperatives corporate farms CORPORATE INVASION cost County crops Denver Department of Agriculture Dinuba economic efficiency family farm Farm Bureau Farmers Union farming operations Federal Federal Trade Commission feed feedlots firms Gates Gates Rubber Company GAYLORD NELSON giant corporations housing income increases Indiana County industry interest INVASION OF AMERICAN irrigation labor land grant universities land values legislation livestock manure million National Farmers Union National Tea nonfarm Odebolt oligopsony ownership packers percent pollution population poultry poverty problem production profits purchases question Ralston Purina Ranch RAUP reported rural America Senator STEVENSON Shinrone Small Business small farmers small-farm community social subcommittee Tenneco tion U.S. Department United urban witness Yuma County
Populāri fragmenti
444. lappuse - The masters of the Government of the United States are the combined capitalists and manufacturers of the United States.
400. lappuse - ... 111 fares the land to hastening ills a prey When wealth accumulates and men decay ; Princes and lords may flourish or may fade, A breath can make them and a breath has made, But a bold peasantry, their country's pride, When once destroyed can never be supplied.
347. lappuse - In the nature of things, those who have not property, and see their neighbors possess much more than they think them to need, cannot be favorable to laws made for the protection of property. When this class becomes numerous, it grows clamorous. It looks on property as its prey and plunder, and is naturally ready, at all times, for violence and revolution.
513. lappuse - The corporation has certainly not set out to weaken the foundations of democratic politics, but its growth as the characteristic institution of our time is having this consequence.
324. lappuse - In the same line of business, to determine whether to undertake new ventures by comparing the profitability of various types of business activity, and as a guide to the relative movement of sales and profits In order to reduce controversies In wage negotiations.
415. lappuse - We consider land as an inventory, but we are all for growing things on it while we wait for price appreciation of development. Agriculture pays the taxes plus a little.
512. lappuse - ... they would bring upon themselves if they were permitted to have their way. It is because I am against revolution; it is because I am against the doctrines of the Extremists, of the Socialists; it is because I wish to see this country of ours continued as a genuine democracy; it is because I distrust violence and disbelieve in it; it is because I wish to secure this country against ever seeing a time when the 'have-nots...
474. lappuse - President be, and he is hereby, authorized to assign two engineers of the Army and one officer of the Coast Survey now stationed on the Pacific coast, for the purpose of examining and reporting on a system of irrigation in the San Joaquin, Tulare, and Sacramento Valleys of the State of California...
399. lappuse - Upon the development of country life rests ultimately our ability, by methods of farming requiring the highest intelligence, to continue to feed and clothe the hungry nations; to supply the city...
444. lappuse - Suppose you go to Washington and try to get at your government. You will always find that while you are politely listened to, the men really consulted are the men who have the biggest stake — the big bankers, the big manufacturers, the big masters of commerce, the heads of railroad corporations and of steamship corporations. . . . The government of the United States...