Word: steiner
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Daniel Steiner '54, general counsel to the University, said yesterday that "it is not a serious concern, but we will do something about...
...only to add more people to the relief rolls. Increasing the number of social workers did not help, nor did the Work Incentive Program. Welfare mothers, who make up the bulk of recipients, often lacked the education and the basic skills to find suitable employment. Throughout, writes Gilbert Y. Steiner, director of governmental studies at the Brookings Institution, well-meaning planners "overestimated the potential of the welfare population," which numbered 14.8 million, or 7.1% of the U.S. population...
...health services. Initially, at least, the programs were continued or expanded by the Nixon Administration. From 1960 to 1972, social welfare expenditures in the nation shot up nearly fourfold: from $52 billion to $193 billion. Beneath the bluster and the controversy, a significant redistribution of income had taken place. Steiner passes too quickly over some of the deficiencies of welfare, particularly its tendency to break up families by giving assistance only to fatherless homes. Yet it is hard to quarrel with Steiner's summation of the decade: "In relief, there is no substitute for money...
...letter, Henry J. Steiner '51, James Vorenberg '49, and David L. Shapiro '54, professors of Law, and Stanley S. Surrey, Smith professor of Law, said that the quality of life in Cambridge is threatened if the museum is built, as proposed by the Kennedy Corporation, on the 12-acre MBTA yards. The congestion of added masses in the Square would bring with it the problems of pollution, traffic, and parking, they argue...
Quinn will meet next week with Daniel Steiner '54, counsel to the University, and representatives of NASA to give both sides "a final chance to air their views before the takes any action," a source in Quinn's office said...