enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Crashing the Party - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crashing_the_Party

    The book was published by St. Martin's Press in January 2002. The subtitle "How to Tell the Truth and Still Run for President" was considered significant because, according to critic Jonathan Chait, an "aura" honesty and trustworthiness had been central to Nader's work, both as an attorney and as a political candidate.

  3. History of General Motors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_General_Motors

    The Great American Streetcar Scandal is an unproven theory developed by Robert Eldridge Hicks in 1970 and published by Grossman Publishers in 1973 in the book Politics of Land, Ralph Nader's Study Group Report on Land Use in California at pp. 410–412, compiled by Robert C. Fellmeth, Center for Study of Responsive Law, and put forth by ...

  4. Nader v. General Motors Corp. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nader_v._General_Motors_Corp.

    Nader v. General Motors Corp. (25 N.Y. 2d 560, 1970) was a court case in which author and automobile safety lecturer Ralph Nader claimed that General Motors had "conduct[ed] a campaign of intimidation against him in order to 'suppress plaintiff's criticism of and prevent his disclosure of information' about its products" regarding his book Unsafe at Any Speed.

  5. Nader v. Brewer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nader_v._Brewer

    Nader v. Brewer , 531 F.3d 1028 (9th Cir. 2008) [1] is a 2008 decision by the Ninth Circuit ruling that certain Arizona voting regulations were unconstitutional under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution .

  6. Smear campaign - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smear_campaign

    Ralph Nader was the victim of a smear campaign during the 1960s, when he was campaigning for car safety. In order to smear Nader and deflect public attention from his campaign, General Motors engaged private investigators to search for damaging or embarrassing incidents from his past.

  7. Eon (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eon_(novel)

    These themes are further explored as we learn more about the rivalries between the two major factions of the "Stoners"—the more radical, pro-technology Geshel, and the more conservative and predominantly anti-technological Naderites, named in honor of 20th century consumer rights advocate Ralph Nader (who, in Bear's fictional future, was ...

  8. Ross Perot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ross_Perot

    Ross Perot was born in Texarkana, Texas in 1930, the son of Lula May (née Ray) and Gabriel Ross Perot, [3] a commodity broker specializing in cotton contracts. [4] [5] He had an older brother, Gabriel Perot Jr., who died as a toddler. [6]

  9. ConsumerLab.com - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ConsumerLab.com

    ConsumerLab.com, LLC. is a privately held American company registered in White Plains, NY.It is a publisher of test results on health, wellness, and nutrition products. [1] [2] Consumer Labs is not a laboratory, but contracts studies to outside testing laboratories.