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...spin far beyond his -- or anyone else's -- control. Worse yet, Greenspan, probably one of the most political of the political appointees in the job, now finds himself under assault -- and not just because some have blamed him for the markets' recent bungee jumping. Ironically, it is his almost Clintonian sense of dealmaking and compromise, often for the purpose of protecting his turf, that helps explain why so many people lately have been second-guessing the Republican appointee...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can You Blame Him? | 4/18/1994 | See Source »

...Clintonian 1990s, the President and his wife aren't the only Washington couple whose careers are brilliantly synergistic. Here's a list of some of the others, ranked by their GorbScore, a rating from 1 to 10 derived from a formula that measures the couple's influence and charm, using as a benchmark the models of modern power partnership, Mikhail and Raisa Gorbachev...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Honey, I've Asked the Macbeths In for Drinks | 8/23/1993 | See Source »

...opening summit session Wednesday, he worked the room like a campaign kaffeeklatsch, stopping to chat briefly with each of the other leaders before taking his chair. Though he talked tough at times, he set the tone at that first meeting with a sentence that sounded more Japanese than Clintonian: "In hard times we shouldn't react like porcupines. We should open up like sunflowers." He also appealed directly to the Japanese public in a speech at Waseda University. One point: Japanese consumers are hurt by the country's trade restrictions because they pay outrageous prices for imports...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Traveling Salesman | 7/19/1993 | See Source »

...Clintonian familiarity establishes itself in a process of show-and-tell. We show each other our trials, then we tell each other how concerned we are about them and how determined we are to make things better. Clinton led the national show-and-tell with a tour of the stations of his own life -- his father's death in a car accident, his stepfather's drunkenness, his half brother's drug addiction, his mother's breast cancer. Even incidents that at first appeared to be reflections on his character rather than on his circumstances -- his dithering over the draft...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Does Familiarity Breed Contentment? | 12/7/1992 | See Source »

...companies doing business in the U.S. for $45 billion in taxes over four years. He would rely on that measure to provide nearly one-third of all the new taxes he will need to finance his program to reduce the deficit and increase public investment. The stratagem is characteristically Clintonian: an apparently painless (for Americans) way of generating revenue without raising unpopular levies like the gasoline tax or touching popular spending programs like Medicare...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Foreigner-Tax Folly | 11/30/1992 | See Source »

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