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Sandwiched between a backdrop that read “Working Towards Independence” and an unsympathetic and largely black audience, Bush responded on Tuesday with a proposal to increase the 50 percent requirement for single parent households to 70 percent by 2007 and eliminate the credits that let states meet requirements by decreasing the total number of families receiving...

Author: By Daniel K. Rosenheck, | Title: Bush Abandons His Own | 2/28/2002 | See Source »

...draft statement issued last week, the governors said the bill’s definition of work activity should include more job training, education and drug abuse treatment, eliminate the requirment stipulating that 90 percent of two-parent families have one parent working and allow families whose five years on welfare are about to expire to remain on the rolls...

Author: By Daniel K. Rosenheck, | Title: Bush Abandons His Own | 2/28/2002 | See Source »

...Beland's Puerto Rico mailing address on the letters page, though, the suspense is ruptured. But the reason you read "True Story" is its vulnerability. It has completely let its guard down, as I suppose you need to do to fall in love. So we see Tom visiting his parent's grave and talking to them, and when Lily arrives in California for a visit he simply admits, "I'm so happy I could cry right now. Hell... I probably...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Comix Love | 2/26/2002 | See Source »

MusicNet is a service found on both AOL (part of the parent company of this magazine) and Real Networks' media player, RealOne. It costs $9.99 a month, and you get 100 downloads timed to expire at the end of that period. To hear them after a month, you must download them again. I barely remember to do the laundry every month; now I have to renew my rights to Peggy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hitting All the Wrong Notes | 2/25/2002 | See Source »

...does USSK do it? With the same model that its parent company says is killing its American business. The average yearly wage at the Slovak plant is just $5,500, a tenth of what a typical American steelworker earns. The Slovak government helps pay USSK's retiree health and pension costs. Unions are virtually non-existent. And the firm may have gained market share illegally. USSK is being investigated by the European Commission for allegedly dumping hot-rolled coil at prices 30% below the domestic Slovak price in the first seven months of last year. "What we see in Europe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Protectionism: Steeling Jobs | 2/25/2002 | See Source »

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