Box 10
Contains 20 Results:
Labor Law Reform - Hill-Knowlton, Public Relations Campaign, 1967 Request Item
Includes: Chamber of Commerce of the United States. The Need for Labor Law Reform. Washington, D.C. (no publication date given), Hill and Knowlton, Inc. Background Memorandum: The Need for Labor Law Reform. New York: Dec. 1967., other reports and memoranda by Hill and Knowlton, Inc. and the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM)
Labor Law Reform - Testimonies before Congress, 1962-1968 Request Item
Includes: Congressional Record
Labor Law Reform Study, 1967-1969 Request Item
Includes: Labor Law Reform Study: Amendments to the Labor Management Relations Act. Sept. 1969 Draft and Draft Working Papers, Fifth Revision, Nov. 6 1967., McCulloch's notes on the Study. *Note - The Labor Law Reform Study was prepared by the "Troika" of Guy Farmer, Gerry Reilly and Theodore Iserman. The Study received financial support from the Chamber of Commerce and the NAM
Labor Law Reversals Request Item
Includes: memoranda and listings of NLRB decisions overruling precedent, defenses against the claim that the NLRB is anti-business
Labor - Personnel Reports, 1962-1963 Request Item
Various issues from 1962-1963, Re: advice to management about unions. Published by the Research Institute of America
Labor Policy Association, 1958-1964 Request Item
Labor Relations, General, 1971-1973 Request Item
includes news clippings
Labor Relations, General Request Item
late 1960s-mid 1970s; Includes: news clippings. Note - this entry overlaps with the previous entry, but the two appeared separately in McCulloch's original files and consequently are left as separate files.
Labor Relations, General, 1975-1980 Request Item
Includes: articles, handwritten notes, 1975. Statement of Frank McCulloch to the Special Subcommittee on Labor, Committee on Education and Labor, House of Representatives, Washington, D.C. November, various bills submitted to the House of Representatives in 1977. *Note - these are materials that were included in a later submission by Frank McCulloch and are noted to provide evidence of the need for reform in labor law