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...overshadow the podium-packing Bushes but appealing enough to get good press. Quayle lives a quiet, suburban life in McLean, Va., with three blond children and a handsome wife he married in 1972, ten weeks after their first date. The daughter of physicians, Marilyn Quayle is also a political "twofer": a lawyer who has decided not to work, she can appeal to the emerging Gloria Steinems of the G.O.P. without threatening the Phyllis Schlaflys...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Republicans Family, Golf and Politics | 8/29/1988 | See Source »

Levy an energy tax. This could be a twofer: it would not only help ease the budget deficit but could also reduce the trade gap by discouraging demand for imported oil. A tax of $5 per bbl. on annual U.S. imports of some 1.5 billion bbl. of foreign crude would raise approximately $7.5 billion in extra revenues. An alternative is a gasoline tax of 5 cents per gal. in addition to the current 9 cents federal levy, which would produce an extra $5 billion or so (1986 U.S. consumption: 112 billion gal.). Though energy taxes tend to be regressive, citizens...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Crash: Ways To Get Out from Under | 11/2/1987 | See Source »

...people who turned out for a party honoring Louise Nevelson got a twofer. It was the famed sculptress's 80th birthday, and she was also being saluted by New York's Municipal Art Society as a champion of urban art. Nevelson steadfastly refused to blow out the 80 candles, saying, "Let them burn and burn and burn." They...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Nov. 12, 1979 | 11/12/1979 | See Source »

...lack of credentials for the job to which Jimmy Carter named her last week: Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. Hers was quite an understatement. A black Washington lawyer, she knows the worlds of business, academe and government. Moreover, by appointing her, Carter got a kind of "twofer": as a black and as a woman, she is proof that the President-elect is trying to open his Cabinet to both groups...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Two for One Deal | 1/3/1977 | See Source »

When patches of empty seats begin to fester in the orchestra of a long-run Broadway hit, a producer will do anything that does not break the Lindbergh law to fill his seats. The commonest hookcrook is the "twofer," a pasteboard promising to sell the bearer two tickets for the price of one more or less. Press gangs range from Westchester to Harlem (where a growing middle class provides some of Broadway's steadiest customers) to drop twofer bait at insurance offices, union halls, colleges, doctors' waiting rooms and similar waterholes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Broadway: Onefers & Twofers | 5/12/1961 | See Source »

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