Word: productions
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Through a cigarette-smoke-turned-dollar-sign link, the Web site shows that a fraction of the money you spend on Entemann's, Altoids, Philadelphia cream cheese, Jell-O or any Kraft or Miller product makes its way up the corporate system to the parent company, Philip Morris. Maybe such diversification should be lauded, not boycotted, but the fact that Philip Morris has been exploiting its connections to Kraft to get its name on public-service (or self-service?) spots during televised weekend sporting events might make you reconsider how those alliances function and for whom. The same could easily...
Donahue recalled one tobacco-related issue that was slightly more controversial. One shareholder proposal asked the company H.B. Fuller, which makes glue, to stop selling its product to cigarette companies...
...students said, they feel excluded from many of those decisions. Illingworth assured them that some of that distance was not intentional but a product of the University's bureaucracy...
...turned in a draft in early March, and the final product a few weeks later...
...Majesty's anti-corporate-screed-masquerading-as-law notwithstanding, what is most profoundly disturbing is his implicit rejection of law as a framework within which free moral agents can make informed choices. Given his ruling, how can any company of the future know in advance when improving product A is "monopolistic?" Or when serving the consumer is "predatory?" It cannot. And the moral bankruptcy of such schemes is, therefore, akin to all ex post facto legislation. It is no different from any other attempt to punish someone today for an action performed legally yesterday...