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...pages; $23), Pulitzer-prizewinning historian Garry Wills tries to answer that familiar question by posing some queries of his own. Where are the good followers? Wills asks. And where are the great issues and programs that unite leader and led in action? A leader without committed followers is an unheard voice in the wilderness. Followers without a leader who understands their needs are a mere mob. And without a timely, common cause, neither leader nor followers will affect history, for good or ill. Wills describes 16 people in 16 different fields, from Mary Baker Eddy (church) to Ross Perot (business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: Following the Leaders | 5/9/1994 | See Source »

These uniforms are issued and laundered weekly at no cost to employees. After working for two local security companies before coming to Harvard, I can attest that these are benefits unheard of in the industry...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Article `Grossly Misrepresented' Museum Working Conditions | 3/23/1994 | See Source »

College radio does not operate under the same financial constraints, and can therefore afford to be more adventurous with its programming. As a result, while the Record Hospital spins new independently released music and virtually unheard-of older records, the music on most commercial radio stations is bland and repetitive...

Author: By Ethan A. Vogt, | Title: The Record Hospital: A Healthy Kind of Sick | 3/17/1994 | See Source »

...wake of the birth of punk in the '70s: "When mainstream radio lost its grip on music, then the long-dormant airwaves of the college radio stations...became an invaluable American network...the inevitable conduit for all the independently released records to be given their due. They played the unheard music...

Author: By Ethan A. Vogt, | Title: The Record Hospital: A Healthy Kind of Sick | 3/17/1994 | See Source »

...quite what was anticipated. Arafat spoke with justifiable outrage and a hint of reluctance to continue negotiating, but he kept his options open. Yitzhak Rabin made a point of sounding genuinely horrified when he called Goldstein "deranged," and he extended uncharacteristically warm offerings to the Palestinians while imposing unheard-of measures against the settlers. Bill Clinton, with unusual decisiveness, made merit out of mayhem and invited both parties to resume their talks in Washington immediately. The Hebron rampage may end up achieving the opposite of what Goldstein intended: speeding up the Israeli-P.L.O. peace negotiations rather than wrecking them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: When Fury Rules | 3/7/1994 | See Source »

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