ACTWU's International Affairs Department Records 1976-1984
Collection Number: 5619/032
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives
Cornell University Library
Title:
ACTWU's International Affairs Department Records, 1976-1984
Collection Number:
5619/032
Creator:
Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union. International Affairs Department
Art Gundersheim
Art Gundersheim
Quantity:
7 linear feet
Forms of Material:
Correspondence, reports, publications.
Repository:
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Cornell University Library
Abstract:
This collection consists of correspondence, reports, and files from the office of Art Gundersheim, Director of the International
Affairs Department for the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers' Union. Included are files on Footwear, the Generalized
System of Preferences (GSP),
Imports, the Labor-Industry Coalition for International Trade (LICIT), Leather Apparel, Multifiber Arrangement (MFA),
and Multilateral Trade Negotiations.
Language:
Collection material in English
The Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, the most significant union representing workers in the men's clothing industry,
was founded in
New York City in 1914 as a breakaway movement from the United Garment Workers. Radical and immigrant workers in the tailors’
and cutters’ locals
were the core of the seceding group, which advocated industrial unionism and economic strikes in opposition to the UGW’s
craft organization, which
they saw as conservative and timid. Their diverging views had come to the fore during the historic 1910 dispute at the
Chicago firm Hart, Schaffner,
and Marx. The opposition called the strike against the UGW leadership’s advice, and reached a path-breaking agreement
with management that
established an arbitration system to settle disputes.
Members flocked to the new union. Around 50,000 strong at its founding, by 1920 the ACWA counted about 170,000 members. Initially
composed mostly of
immigrants of Jewish European descent with Socialist leanings, the ACWA quickly welcomed members of a great number of
nationalities and diverse
backgrounds. Like in other garment unions, most workers and many members were women, but the leadership was predominantly
male, a situation that
did not change for many decades. Early on the union adopted a centralized administrative structure combined with industrial
unionism, with the
joint boards’ by-laws having precedence over those of locals.
Espousing a philosophy perhaps brought over by its early immigrant socialist members, the Amalgamated went beyond bread and
butter issues and
adopted a distinctive form of social unionism that was largely absent in the American labor movement. Starting in the
1920s, it provided
educational opportunities and recreational facilities for its members, as well as services such as an insurance plan,
banks offering personal
loans at low interest rates, low-cost housing cooperatives, medical clinics, and even union-owned restaurants.
Sidney Hillman was the first president of the new union and the most important officer in its history. He applied his experience
as bargaining
representative in Chicago to the whole industry. Under his leadership the union made significant strides in securing better
wages and working
conditions for its members, and at the same time it consolidated gains and provided stability to the industry through
the widespread adoption
of the arbitration system tested at Hart, Schaffner, and Marx. Hillman paid close attention to industry issues, such as
production, pricing, and
marketing. In order to help management meet the competition of non-union firms, the union conducted studies of efficiency,
work methods, and factory
costs. Letters to the official publication of the union, Advance, document the controversy that ensued within the union
over what was perceived to
be collaboration with management.
Hillman also understood the importance of labor’s involvement in national affairs and political action. In the 1920s the ACWA
sent delegates to the
Conference for Progressive Political Action and to the Farmer-labor party conventions. Although many members and officers
were Socialists, the
union stopped short of officially endorsing the party. Communist attempts at gaining influence within the union were firmly
curbed. Hillman’s
participation in national affairs and politics became prominent during the New Deal, when he became a close advisor to
Franklin D. Roosevelt on
labor and economic issues. He also served on the board of the National Recovery Administration. Later, during World War
II, he helped establish
the Labor’s Non Partisan League. He was also named associate director of the Office of Production Management, which assisted
in mobilizing the
nation's resources for the war effort. Hillman’s prestige perhaps reflected the healthy condition of his union, which
by the end of the conflict
was strong and stable.
During the post World War II period the union faced a number of significant challenges. Membership continued to grow (peaking
at 395,000 in 1968),
but the union’s political influence and visibility in national affairs declined. In their never ending pursuit of lower
production costs, many
firms relocated to the South, forcing the union to engage in large organizing efforts. Simultaneously, signs began to
appear of changes that
would lead to the almost complete demise of the domestic apparel industry and, ultimately, to the erosion of union membership.
Foreign imports
of cheap clothing goods steadily grew in the 1950s and 1960s, and mushroomed in the following two decades, plunging employment
in the apparel
sector into a steady decline. Union efforts to stem the tide included Buy American campaigns and extensive lobbying in
Congress, but they were
to no avail. In 1976, the ACWA merged with the Textile Workers of America to become the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile
Workers Union. Despite
successful and much publicized nationwide actions such as the Farah boycott and the J.P. Stevens corporate campaign, the
woes threatening the
union’s existence continued unabated. The fate of the domestic industry was sealed in the late 1970s and the 1980s by
the flight of firms chasing
tax breaks and cheap labor abroad. By 1995, when ACTWU voted to merge with the International Ladies' Garment Workers'
Union, their combined
membership was 350,000. The new Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees (UNITE!) seemed poised to infuse
new life in a
troubled union.
Names:
Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union
Gundersheim, Arthur
Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union --Archives.
Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union. International Affairs Department --Archives
International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union --Archives
Textile Workers Union of America --Archives
Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees --Archives
UNITE HERE (Organization) --Archives
Subjects:
Textile industry--New York (State)--New York
Textile workers--Labor unions--New York (State)--New York
Clothing trade--New York (State)--New York
Clothing workers--Labor unions--New York (State)--New York
Form and Genre Terms:
Correspondence
Records
Access Restrictions:
Access to the collections in the Kheel Center is restricted. Please contact a reference archivist for access to these materials.
Restrictions on Use:
This collection must be used in keeping with the Kheel Center Information Sheet and Procedures for Document Use.
Cite As:
ACTWU's International Affairs Department Records #5619/032. Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives,
Cornell University Library.
Related collections:
5619: Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America
5619/032 PUBS: ACTWU's International Affairs Department Publications
And all other 5619 collections.
5619: Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America
5619/032 PUBS: ACTWU's International Affairs Department Publications
And all other 5619 collections.
Container
|
Description
|
Date
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 1 |
Anti-Dumping
|
1977-1979 |
Box 1 | Folder 2 |
Articles 20-82
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 3 |
AVTEX Fibers Dumping Suit
|
1977-1978 |
Box 1 | Folder 4 |
Business Cards. Domestic.
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 5 |
Business Cards. Foreign.
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 6 |
Clippings
|
1977-1979 |
Box 1 | Folder 7 |
Codes
|
1978 |
Box 1 | Folder 8 |
Congress
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 9 |
Consumer Prices
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 10 |
Cornwall, PA. Education Conference
|
1972 |
Box 1 | Folder 11 |
Department of Labor. Memoranda.
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 12 |
Domestic International Sales Corporation (DISC)
|
1979 |
Box 1 | Folder 13 |
Early Submissions by the Textile Workers Union of America
|
1967-1975 |
Box 1 | Folder 14 |
Economics. General.
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 15 |
Enterprise Zones
|
1981-1982 |
Box 1 | Folder 16 |
European Economic Community
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 17 |
Exports
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 18 |
Foreign Industrial Policies and the Future of American Industry
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 19 |
Gloves. Peoples Republic of China.
|
1977-1978 |
Box 1 | Folder 20 |
Art Gundersheim. Meeting Notes.
|
1977-1978 |
Box 1 | Folder 21 |
Art Gundersheim. "To Do" Folder
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 22 |
Holland Tariff Bill
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 23 |
Import Limitation
|
1978 |
Box 1 | Folder 24 |
Industry and Trade Administration. Textile Agreement Performance Report
|
1980 |
Box 1 | Folder 25 |
Item 807
|
1976-1980 |
Box 1 | Folder 26 |
J.T.R. Program
|
1978-1980 |
Box 1 | Folder 27 |
Legislation
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 28 |
N.Y. Citizens for Balanced Transportation
|
1980 |
Box 1 | Folder 29 |
Organizing
|
1979-1980 |
Box 1 | Folder 30 |
Political Action Committees
|
1981 |
Box 1 | Folder 31 |
Press Conference
|
1978 |
Box 1 | Folder 32 |
Elizabeth Smith. Schedule.
|
1980 |
Box 1 | Folder 33 |
Elizabeth Smith. Schedule.
|
1981 |
Box 1 | Folder 34 |
Elizabeth Smith. Travel
|
1980 |
Box 1 | Folder 35 |
Table 21
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 36 |
Trade Adjustment Assistance
|
1979-1983 |
Box 1 | Folder 37 |
Transshipments
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 38 |
Textile Apparel Imports Steering Group
|
1978-1980 |
Box 1 | Folder 39 |
Textile Information Management System. Description and Specification.
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 40 |
White Paper
|
1978 |
Box 1 | Folder 41 |
Wool Suit Imports
|
|
Box 2 | Folder 1 |
ACWA. Data Update. Vol. I
|
1977 |
pp. 11-608
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 2 |
ACWA. Data Update Vol.1
|
1977 |
pp.609-831
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 3 |
ACWA Data Update Vol.1
|
1977 |
pp.832-1044
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 4 |
ACWA Data Update Vol.2
|
1977 |
pp.1045- 1180
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 5 |
ACWA Data Update Vol.2
|
1977 |
pp. 1181-1315
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 6 |
ACWA Data Update Vol.2
|
1977 |
pp. 1316-1462 with two additional attachments
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 7 |
ACTWU Legislative List
|
1977 |
95th
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 8 |
ACTWU SIC 22. 23 Vol.1
|
1977 |
Tabs A-C
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 9 |
ACTWU SIC 22. 23 Vol.1
|
1977 |
Tab D pp. 444-678
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 10 |
ACTWU SIC 22.23 Vol.1
|
1977 |
Tab D pp. 679-895
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 11 |
ACTWU SIC 22.23 Vol.3
|
1977 |
Tabs E - H
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 12 |
ACTWU SIC 22.23 Vol.3
|
1977 |
Tabs I-K
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 13 |
AFL-CIO Israel Visit
|
1982 |
Box 2 | Folder 14 |
AFL- CIO. Reagan Recession
|
1982 |
May 26th pp. 1-5
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 15 |
AFL- CIO Standing Committees
|
1978-1979 |
Box 2 | Folder 16 |
AFL- CIO Statements
|
1979 |
February 19- March 8th
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 17 |
AFL- CIO Statements
|
1980 |
February 18-25th
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 18 |
Conventions, Resolutions
|
|
Contains texts of an address
|
|||
Box 2 | Folder 19 |
Conventions Resolutions AFI- CIO
|
1977-1979 |
Box 2 | Folder 20 |
Conventions Resolutions ACTWU
|
1978 |
Box 2 | Folder 21 |
Conventions ACTWU
|
1978 |
Box 2 | Folder 22 |
Countervailing Duties
|
1977-1979 |
Box 3 | Folder 1 |
Countervailing Duty Suits [folder 1 of 2]
|
|
Box 3 | Folder 2 |
Countervailing Duty Suits [folder 2 of 2]
|
|
Box 3 | Folder 3 |
Countervailing Duties. U.S. Department of the Treasury
|
1979 |
Box 3 | Folder 4 |
Customs. French Suits
|
1976- 1977 |
Box 3 | Folder 5 |
Customs ITA 2a
|
1976 |
Box 3 | Folder 6 |
Customs Tariff Schedule
|
|
English and Chinese
|
|||
Box 3 | Folder 7 |
Customs Modernization
|
1977 |
Box 3 | Folder 8 |
AFIA Policy Paper on Import Control
|
1979 |
American Footwear Industries Association
|
|||
Box 3 | Folder 9 |
AFIA Extended Import Relief
|
1980 |
Box 3 | Folder 10 |
Footwear Clippings
|
1977-1980 |
Box 3 | Folder 11 |
Consultations with the Philippines
|
1979 |
Box 3 | Folder 12 |
Footwear Correspondence
|
1978- 1980 |
Box 3 | Folder 13 |
Footwear. Extension of Import Relief
|
1980 |
Box 3 | Folder 14 |
Footwear Fact Sheets
|
1979 |
Box 3 | Folder 15 |
Footwear. Handwritten Notes
|
|
Box 3 | Folder 16 |
Footwear Imports
|
1978- 1979 |
Box 3 | Folder 17 |
Footwear Imports
|
1979- 1980 |
Box 3 | Folder 18 |
Footwear Imports Import Relief Program
|
1979 |
Box 3 | Folder 19 |
Footwear Imports Summary Tables
|
1979-1980 |
Box 3 | Folder 20 |
Footwear India Countervailing Duty Brief
|
1980 |
Box 3 | Folder 21 |
Footwear India Uppers
|
1980 |
Box 3 | Folder 22 |
Footwear MacNeil/Lehrer Reprint Labor and Protectionism
|
1977 |
Box 3 | Folder 23 |
Footwear National Affairs Committee
|
1979 |
Box 3 | Folder 24 |
Footwear Stanley Nehmer Testimony
|
1976 |
Box 3 | Folder 25 |
Footwear Record of Meeting
|
1980 |
February 5th
|
|||
Box 3 | Folder 26 |
Footwear. Report on Shoe Negotiations and General Observations
|
1979 |
Box 3 | Folder 27 |
Footwear. Report on Survey
|
|
Box 3 | Folder 28 |
Footwear Reports
|
1978-1980 |
Box 3 | Folder 29 |
Footwear. Shoe Import Crisis
|
1979-1980 |
Box 3 | Folder 30 |
Footwear Statements of Retail Clerks
|
1979 |
International Union of ACTWU
|
|||
Box 3 | Folder 31 |
Footwear Statistics
|
1979 |
Box 3 | Folder 32 |
Footwear. 201 Case. Clippings and Press Releases
|
1984 |
Box 3 | Folder 33 |
Footwear. 210 Case ITC Hearing Schedule
|
1984 |
Box 3 | Folder 34 |
Footwear. 201 Case. Memoranda and Correspondence
|
1983-1984 |
Box 3 | Folder 35 |
Footwear. 201 Case. Petition for Relief Draft 1983
|
1983 |
Box 3 | Folder 36 |
Footwear. 201 Case. Petition for Relief
|
1984 |
Box 3 | Folder 37 |
Footwear. 201 Case. Petitioners' Prehearing Brief Draft
|
1984 |
Box 3 | Folder 38 |
Footwear. 201 Case. Petitioners' Responses
|
1984 |
Box 3 | Folder 39 |
Footwear. 201 Case. Post-Hearing Brief
|
1984 |
Box 4 | Folder 1 |
Footwear. 201 Case. Reports and Statistics
|
|
Box 4 | Folder 2 |
Footwear. 201 Case. Pre Hearing Brief
|
1984 |
Box 4 | Folder 3 |
Footwear. 201 Case. Press Conference Material
|
1984 |
Box 4 | Folder 4 |
Footwear. 201 Case. A Public Relations Program for the Footwear Industries of America
|
1983 |
Box 4 | Folder 5 |
Footwear. 201 Case. Report
|
1984 |
Box 4 | Folder 6 |
Footwear. 201 Case. Statements and Testimony
|
1984 |
Box 4 | Folder 7 |
Footwear. 203 Case. Post Hearing Brief
|
1981 |
Box 4 | Folder 8 |
Full Employment. Correspondence and Memoranda
|
1976-1978 |
Box 4 | Folder 9 |
Full Employment. General [folder 1 of 2]
|
1976-1980 |
Box 4 | Folder 10 |
Full Employment. General [folder 2 of 2]
|
1976-1980 |
Box 4 | Folder 11 |
Generalized System of Preferences (GSP)
|
1977 |
Box 4 | Folder 12 |
Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) [folder 1 of 2]
|
1978 |
Box 4 | Folder 13 |
Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) [folder2 of 2]
|
1978 |
Box 4 | Folder 14 |
Generalized System of Preferences (GSP)
|
1979-1980 |
Box 4 | Folder 15 |
Generalized System of Preferences (GSP). Leather
|
1977 |
Box 4 | Folder 16 |
Generalized System of Preferences (GSP). Leather
|
1978 |
Box 4 | Folder 17 |
Generalized System of Preferences (GSP). Silk Neckties
|
|
Box 4 | Folder 18 |
Imports. Exceptions Nomination and Justification. Men's and Boy's Apparel Draft
|
1977 |
Box 4 | Folder 19 |
Imports. Exceptions Nomination and Justification. Men's and Boys' Apparel Final
|
1977 |
copy 1
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 20 |
Imports. Exceptions Nomination and Justification. Men's and Boy's Apparel Final
|
1977 |
copy 2
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 21 |
Imports. Exceptions Nomination and Justification. Men's and Boy's Apparel. Final
|
1977 |
copy 3
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 22 |
Imports. Press Release. Union seeks higher tariffs
|
1977 |
Box 4 | Folder 23 |
Imports. Statement. Murray Finley and Jacob Sheinkman
|
1977 |
Box 4 | Folder 24 |
Imports. Statistics
|
1977 |
Box 5 | Folder 1 |
Imports. Argentina
|
1977 |
Box 5 | Folder 2 |
Imports. Brazil
|
1977 |
Box 5 | Folder 3 |
Imports. Colombia
|
1977 |
Box 5 | Folder 4 |
Imports. India
|
1977 |
Box 5 | Folder 5 |
Imports. Korea
|
1977 |
Box 5 | Folder 6 |
Imports. Malaysia
|
1978 |
Box 5 | Folder 7 |
Imports. Mexico
|
1978 |
Box 5 | Folder 8 |
Imports. Pakistan
|
1978 |
Box 5 | Folder 9 |
Imports. Philippines
|
1977 |
Box 5 | Folder 10 |
Imports. Singapore
|
1978 |
Box 5 | Folder 11 |
Imports. Taiwan
|
1977 |
Box 5 | Folder 12 |
Imports. Thailand
|
1978 |
Box 5 | Folder 13 |
Imports. Uruguay
|
1977 |
Box 5 | Folder 14 |
International Trade Commission. Investigation AA1921-181 Richard T. Schulze. Statements
|
1978 |
Box 5 | Folder 15 |
International Trade Commission. Investigation AA1921-181 Maurica H. Winger, Jr. Statement
|
|
Box 5 | Folder 16 |
International Trade Commission. Investigation AA1921-181 John N. Gregg. Statement
|
1978 |
Box 5 | Folder 17 |
International Trade Commission. Investigation AA1921-181 Joseph H. Price. Statement
|
1978 |
Box 5 | Folder 18 |
LICIT. Background and Purpose. Draft
|
1984 |
Box 5 | Folder 19 |
LICIT. Bill regarding unfair import compensation. Draft
|
1984 |
Box 5 | Folder 20 |
LICIT. Briefing Book
|
1980 |
October 6-7th
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 21 |
LICIT. Briefing Book
|
1981 |
October 15th
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 22 |
LICIT. Briefing Book
|
1982 |
July 22nd
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 23 |
LICIT. Briefing Book
|
1987 |
April 6th
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 24 |
LICIT. Briefing Book
|
1983 |
November 29th
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 25 |
LICIT. Briefing Book
|
1984 |
May 31st
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 26 |
LICIT. Briefing Book
|
1984 |
November 28th
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 27 |
LICIT. Clippings
|
1983 |
Box 5 | Folder 28 |
LICIT. Correspondence
|
|
Box 5 | Folder 29 |
LICIT. Exchange Rates. International Debt and Trade Draft
|
1983 |
Box 5 | Folder 30 |
LICIT. EximBank Reauthorization
|
1983 |
Box 5 | Folder 31 |
LICIT. Lawrence A. Fox Testimony
|
1983 |
Box 5 | Folder 32 |
LICIT. Handwritten Notes
|
1983 |
June 7th
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 33 |
LICIT. International Trade. Industrial Policies and the future of American Industry. Draft
|
1983 |
Box 5 | Folder 34 |
LICIT. Memoranda
|
|
Box 5 | Folder 35 |
LICIT. Press Release
|
1982 |
Box 5 | Folder 36 |
LICIT. Principals Meeting
|
1981 |
October 15th
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 37 |
LICIT. Principals Meeting
|
1983 |
April 6th
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 38 |
LICIT. Principals Meeting
|
1984 |
May 31st
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 39 |
LICIT. Principals Meeting
|
1984 |
November 28th
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 40 |
LICIT. Position papers and Briefings
|
1981 |
October
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 41 |
LICIT. The problem of Trade Related Performance Requirements
|
|
Box 5 | Folder 42 |
LICIT. Proposed Amendments to US Trade Laws Draft
|
1983 |
Box 5 | Folder 43 |
LICIT. Recommendations of the Japan- U.S. Work Group on High Technology Industries
|
|
Box 5 | Folder 44 |
LICIT. Section by Section Analysis of the title E Amendments Draft
|
1984 |
Box 5 | Folder 45 |
LICIT. Statement of William Bywater and John D. Ong
|
1983 |
Box 5 | Folder 46 |
LICIT. Statement of Douglas D. Danforth and Howard D. Samuel
|
1983 |
Box 5 | Folder 47 |
LICIT. Statement of LICIT.
|
1983 |
Box 5 | Folder 48 |
LICIT. Statement of Herbert K. Schmitz and Brian Turner
|
1983 |
Box 5 | Folder 49 |
LICIT. Statement of Alan W. Wolff
|
1981-1983 |
Box 5 | Folder 50 |
LICIT. Report to the Development Committee
|
1980 |
Box 5 | Folder 51 |
LICIT. Report on Export Disincentives
|
1980 |
February
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 52 |
LICIT. Alan W. Wolff. Revisions of Section 301 Draft
|
1983 |
Box 5 | Folder 53 |
LICIT. Trade Reorganization
|
1983 |
Box 5 | Folder 54 |
LICIT. Specification for Trade Legislation
|
1984 |
Box 5 | Folder 55 |
LICIT. Subcommitee on Trade
|
1987 |
Box 5 | Folder 56 |
LICIT. Trade Communications Project
|
1984 |
Box 5 | Folder 57 |
LICIT. Trade Policy Roundtable Discussion
|
1981 |
Box 5 | Folder 58 |
LICIT. Trade Policy Roundtabe Discussion
|
1981 |
copy 2
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 59 |
LICIT. Unfair Trade Practice Draft
|
1983 |
Box 5 | Folder 60 |
Leather Apparel. Brief on Behalf of National Outerwear and Sportswear Association
|
|
Box 5 | Folder 61 |
Leather Apparel. Clippings
|
|
Box 5 | Folder 62 |
Leather Apparel. Colombia and Brazil Report
|
1977 |
Box 5 | Folder 63 |
Leather Apparel. Correspondence
|
1979-1980 |
Box 5 | Folder 64 |
Leather Apparel. Equipment Purchases
|
1980 |
Box 6 | Folder 1 |
Leather Apparel. Trade Policy Staff Committee Brief
|
1980 |
Box 6 | Folder 2 |
Leather Apparel. Uruguay
|
1978 |
Box 6 | Folder 3 |
Leather Apparel. Uruguay. International Trade Commission Report
|
1978 |
Box 6 | Folder 4 |
Multifiber Arrangement (MFA). Steering Committee
|
1976 |
Box 6 | Folder 5 |
Multifiber Arrangement (MFA). MFA Taskforce Hearing
|
1977-1978 |
Box 6 | Folder 6 |
Multifiber Arrangement (MFA). Special Taskforce. Appendix
|
1977 |
Box 6 | Folder 7 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Agreements
|
1979 |
Box 6 | Folder 8 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Agreements
|
|
Box 6 | Folder 9 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. AFL-CIO. Analysis and Recommendations
|
1979 |
Box 6 | Folder 10 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. American Textile Manufacturers Institute. Maintain existing US textile and apparel tariff
|
1977 |
Box 6 | Folder 11 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Apparel Exceptions
|
|
Box 6 | Folder 12 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Clippings
|
|
Box 6 | Folder 13 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Codes
|
1979 |
Box 6 | Folder 14 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Correspondence
|
|
Box 6 | Folder 15 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Developing Country Issues
|
1977 |
Box 6 | Folder 16 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Exemptions
|
1977 |
Box 6 | Folder 17 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Felt Manufacturers Council. Need to exempt pressed felt
|
|
Box 6 | Folder 18 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Foreign
|
1977 |
Box 6 | Folder 19 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. GATT
|
1978 |
Box 6 | Folder 20 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Implementation
|
1979 |
Box 6 | Folder 21 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Industrial Trade and Employment Effects of the MTN
|
|
Box 6 | Folder 22 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Knitted Outerwear
|
1977 |
Box 6 | Folder 23 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Labor Policy and Labor Sector Advisory Committees
|
1977-1978 |
Box 6 | Folder 24 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Labor Policy and Labor Sector Advisory Committee. Geneva Meeting
|
1978 |
Box 6 | Folder 25 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Man-Made Fiber Producers. Need to maintain tariffs
|
|
Box 6 | Folder 26 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. MTN Negotiating Formula
|
1977 |
Box 6 | Folder 27 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Notes
|
|
Box 6 | Folder 28 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Report on Tariff Negotiations
|
1979 |
Box 6 | Folder 29 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Safeguards and government procurement
|
|
Box 6 | Folder 30 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Selected problems in MTN Implementing Legislation
|
|
Box 6 | Folder 31 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Senate Floor Action
|
1979 |
Box 6 | Folder 32 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Statements. AFL-CIO
|
1979 |
Box 6 | Folder 33 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Robert S. Strauss
|
1977-1979 |
Box 6 | Folder 34 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Subsidies and Countervailing Duties
|
1977 |
Box 6 | Folder 35 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Tariff Reduction
|
1977 - 1980 |
Box 6 | Folder 36 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Trade Agreement
|
1979 |
Box 6 | Folder 37 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations. Wool Manufacturers Council. Need to maintain tariffs
|
1977 |
Box 6 | Folder 38 |
Performance Reports. First Year
|
1978 |
Box 6 | Folder 39 |
Performance Reports. Second Year
|
1977-1978 |
Box 6 | Folder 40 |
Performance Reports. Third Year
|
1976-1978 |
Box 6 | Folder 41 |
Performance Reports. Fourth Year
|
1976- 1977 |
Box 6 | Folder 42 |
Speeches
|
1976 |
Box 6 | Folder 43 |
Speeches
|
1978 |
Box 7 | Folder 1 |
Speeches. Clippings
|
|
Box 7 | Folder 2 |
Speeches. Imports
|
|
Box 7 | Folder 3 |
Speeches. Notes
|
|
Box 7 | Folder 4 |
Speeches. Oak Ridge
|
1980 |
Box 7 | Folder 5 |
Speeches. Solidarity Day
|
1981 |
Box 7 | Folder 6 |
Statistics
|
1975-1977 |
Box 7 | Folder 7 |
Statistics
|
1977-1979 |
Box 7 | Folder 8 |
Statistics. Handbag Data Book
|
1979 |
Box 7 | Folder 9 |
Subsidies Group
|
1978-1979 |
Box 7 | Folder 10 |
Subsidies Group
|
1980 |
Box 7 | Folder 11 |
Tariffs. Files
|
|
Box 7 | Folder 12 |
Tariffs. Notes
|
|
Box 7 | Folder 13 |
Tariffs Rates
|
|
Box 7 | Folder 14 |
Tariffs. Trade Information Committee
|
1964-1971 |
Box 7 | Folder 15 |
Trade Law. Chances
|
1978 |
Box 7 | Folder 16 |
Trade Law. Changes [folder 1 of 2]
|
1981-1984 |
Box 7 | Folder 17 |
Trade Law. Changes [folder 2 of 2]
|
1981-1984 |
Box 7 | Folder 18 |
Trade Law. Legislation
|
1983 |
Box 7 | Folder 19 |
Trade Law Reform
|
1983-1984 |
Box 7 | Folder 20 |
U.S. Government. Bills
|
|
Box 7 | Folder 21 |
U.S. Government. Press Releases
|
1977- 1980 |