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...given its first choice of location: two attractive rooms in the newly renovated Agassiz House. To imply that E4A has been victimized by the Radcliffe administration because of the condition of our furniture is absurd. To suggest this possibility serves only the questionable interest of the Crimson to distort fact and quote out of context in order to promote controversy. Suzanne W. Motheral Program Director

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Education for Action | 6/7/1982 | See Source »

Words can be impregnated with feeling by oversimplification. People who oppose all abortions distort the position of those favoring freedom of private choice by calling them proabortion. And many a progressive or idealist has experienced the perplexity of defending himself against one of the most peculiar of all disparaging terms, do-gooder. By usage in special contexts, the most improbable words can be infused with extraneous meaning. To speak of the "truly needy" as the Administration habitually does is gradually to plant the notion that the unmodified needy are falsely so. Movie Critic Vincent Canby has noticed that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: Watching Out for Loaded Words | 5/24/1982 | See Source »

...Ronald Reagan's favorite rhetorical devices is the vivid example-a "welfare queen" ripping off the system, a school lunch program providing meals to affluent children-that purports to exemplify a pervasive national problem. Such anecdotage, critics claim, tends to oversimplify and distort complex situations. But the device was turned against the Administration last week when CBS News used emotion-charged tales to make the case that some of the nation's truly needy are falling through the social safety net. "Hunger in America is back," said CBS Commentator Bill Moyers in his introduction to the hour-long...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The White House vs. CBS | 5/3/1982 | See Source »

PERSONAL AND SEXUAL politics, rather than corporate ones, tease and distort the audience's expectations in the evening's second play, Bonnie Salomon's Who's the Fool Now? which takes its inspiration from the true story of a writer who commits suicide. Anyone expecting a letdown from Cradle's shuttering close should be not only pleasantly surprised but downright rolled up by a play that is satisfyingly complex and refreshingly free of the problems to which first plays by undergraduates are liable to fall prey...

Author: By Amy E. Schwartz, | Title: Labor and Love | 3/18/1982 | See Source »

...thirds of the world's tin production. Since 1956, they and other producers have had a series of five-year agreements with consuming nations to prevent price fluctuations and stabilize supplies. Last July, however, the consensus fell apart. The Reagan Administration, which does not like deals that distort free markets, declined to sign a new five-year contract...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tintinnabulation | 3/1/1982 | See Source »

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