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...cuts that President Clinton sought in his budget proposal. Lugar will lay out his proposal before the Senate Budget Committee (which is working on the balanced budget amendment) tomorrow, but the basics of his plan were reported in The Washington Post today in a column by political writer David Broder. Lugar would shave $15 billion from an anticipated $50 billion spending on farm programs over five years. Clinton had proposed cutting $1.5 billion in farm program cuts -- with none kicking in before 1998. Most of the Lugar cuts would be made by lowering target prices of crops at a rate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LUGAR TAKES A POWER MOWER TO FARM SUBSIDIES | 2/15/1995 | See Source »

...significant deficit-reduction measures -- much of Washington was concerned last week that Rostenkowski's plight would deprive Congress of a rare power broker who helped push through the 1986 tax-reform bill and NAFTA. "No capital ever has a surplus of politicians with those qualities," the columnist David Broder lamented last week in the Washington Post. "Seeing him brought down . . . is a citywide sorrow...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Gloom Under the Dome | 6/13/1994 | See Source »

...billions as the brain refines its circuitry during development. In adults, the cell- death program serves as a stern disciplinarian. Cells that become irreparably damaged are expected to fall on their swords for the greater good of the organism. "For an animal to live," says Dr. Samuel Broder, director of the National Cancer Institute, "it must contain within its cells the knowledge that they have to die. But the cancer cell divides at all cost. It's forgotten...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Stopping Cancer in Its Tracks | 4/25/1994 | See Source »

...sugar, wheat and lumber futures. The Clintons, he said, would immediately pay $3,315 in back taxes and $10,134 in accrued interest to the U.S. Treasury and $514 in taxes and $652 in interest to the state of Arkansas. Employing a phrase that became notorious during Watergate, John Broder of the Los Angeles Times wryly asked if the previous explanation had become "inoperative." John Podesta, the White House staff secretary, replied half jokingly, "That's inoperative...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: That Revision Thing | 4/25/1994 | See Source »

...turn down all that? Doubtful. Those of us who scribble for a living have demonstrated that if you scratch us, you'll find a TV personality waiting, with batting eyelashes, to be discovered. For all of print's tut-tutting about TV, the most upright of us, like David Broder of the Washington Post, do it. . I do it, and most of my colleagues do it. Even lefties like the Nation's Alexander Cockburn do it. Most of us love doing it. We'll do it for nothing on C-SPAN and ^ MacNeil/Lehrer, or for the TV equivalent...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newswatch: Hey, That's Me on TV! | 8/2/1993 | See Source »

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