Word: kellogg
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...illustrate his small money argument Bok presents the problem of eating Kellogg's Corn Flakes in his open statement. Kellogg's, he points out, has operations in South Africa as does IBM, Ford and Exxon. Should students stop eating Corn Flakes and taking jobs with IBM if we follow the principles that call for divestment...
...these stocks have difficult questions to answer. Do they object to students who take jobs with IBM, Ford, Exxon and other companies who do business in South Africa and take money from these firms in the form of wages rather than dividends? Do they object to buying Coca Cola, Kellogg's Corn Flakes and other products of such companies, thus contributing to profits that may help finance South African operations? Do they object to investing in the 6,000 firms that help South Africa by selling them needed products or buying their exports? What about buying consumer products made...
...other selected professors were: Oxford College's A.O.J. Cockshut, Brown's Reginald D. Archambault, Yale's Anthony Appiah and John Blum, the University of Pennsylvania's Paul Fussell, and the University of Virginia's Bob Kellogg...
Perhaps the most important contribution of the multinational corporations in their strengthening of Black Labor power General Motors and Kellogg were the first companies to recognize Black trade unions. Ford was the first company to permit full-time Black shop stewards. Even more importantly, American companies such as Ford and Kellogg have deliberately undermined government control over Black trade union activity by negotiating with unregistered unions and negotiating outside the government-controlled Industrial Councils...
...recession and now find the cost of big-ticket items like housing, which has been climbing almost twice as fast as the C.P.I. since mid-1982, to be well beyond their reach. "They get a shock," says Haskel Benishay, professor of managerial economics at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management. "They're angry at not being as well off as they think they should...