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...resist that tinge of pride that comes from basking in the glow of one of our Own--that narcissistic gleam which is sparked when our eyes alight, somewhere in the "Real world," on a Harvard name: Marjorie Garber on the Op-Ed page of The Boston Globe, Robert Reich telling all on Oprah, Jill McCorkle's latest novel staring out from B. Dalton's or Neil's "exausted" mug on the cover of Newsweek. So it was with a feeling of excitement that I headed over to the Hasty Pudding Theatre to watch Demons, the new play by my former...

Author: By Danielle E. Kwatinetz, | Title: Brustein's Demons Bedeviled by Actors | 4/6/1995 | See Source »

Republicans are only willing to wield the budget axe against largely defenseless constituencies, such as children, the poor and minorities. Labor Secretary Robert Reich has identified $114 billion in Federal spending and subsidies that qualify as corporate welfare, yet Republicans focus on reducing entitlement spending. An analysis of tax breaks granted to major corporations provides further evidence that the Federal Government's worst sin is not bankrolling a welfare state for the poor. Rather, as M.I.T. Professor Noam Chomsky points out, the Federal Government maintains a "nanny state" for the rich--providing public subsidies to fund private profits throughout...

Author: By David W. Brown, | Title: The National Duty | 3/22/1995 | See Source »

...women. Those conclusions were released today by the Labor Department's Glass Ceiling Commission. Bush Administration Labor Secretary Lynn Martin created the commission in 1991 to document the problem and find ways to remove the barriers that keep women and minorities out of top corporate posts. Labor Secretary Robert Reich said today that the findings are a "strong argument for extra efforts to cast the net more widely and find qualified minorities and women." The commission's final report is due in November...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GLASS CEILING STILL INTACT | 3/15/1995 | See Source »

...disability was simply too central to his very being." Hugh Gallagher, author of F.D.R.'s Splendid Deception, a book detailing how Roosevelt veiled his disability (only two pictures of him in a wheelchair are among the 125,000 in the Roosevelt library), calls the plans "historically inaccurate." Alan Reich, president of the N.O.D., which claims to reflect the feelings of almost 50 million disabled Americans, says visual depiction is necessary because Roosevelt was "the personification of triumph over adversity, and that made him believable when he told the nation they had nothing to fear but fear itself." Both Gallagher...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ROOSEVELT: WHERE'S HIS WHEELCHAIR? | 3/6/1995 | See Source »

...hundred folks trying to figure out how to divide nearly $2 billion,'' said the President plaintively. ``They ought to be able to do that.'' Clinton obviously didn't understand that the baseball strike is like Somalia: simple on the outside, a quagmire once you're in. Labor Secretary Robert Reich, who enjoyed a cushy teaching gig before moving inside the Beltway, seems similarly at sea. ``I've never seen this degree of animosity,'' said Reich. ``I can't explain it.'' Well, listen, Mr. Secretary, we're not talking about some garden-variety dysfunctional family here. These are selfish, spoiled sorts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: STRIKING OUT, SWINGING | 2/20/1995 | See Source »

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