Archive for January, 2006

Coretta Scott King

Coretta Scott King (27 Apr. 1927–30 January 2006) was born in Heiberger, near Marion, Alabama, the second of three children of Obadiah Scott and Bernice McMurry, who farmed their own land. Although Coretta and her siblings worked in the garden and fields, hoeing and picking cotton, the Scotts were relatively well off. Her father was [...]

Health Savings Accounts & the State of the Union

by Jill Quadagno
Last year nearly a million more people were uninsured compared to the year before. The employer-based system that most people of working age have relied on since the 1950s is unraveling at the seams. Each year for more than a decade the percentage of employers offering health benefits has declined. The [...]

Wendy Wasserstein

Oxford University Press mourns the passing of Wendy Wasserstein.
LINK to her obituary in The New York Times.

The War That Made America: A Review

Colin G. Calloway, author of Scratch of a Pen: 1763 and the Transformation of America reviews the PBS documentary “The War That Made America”:
Looking back, it often seems difficult for modern-day Americans to see beyond the Revolution and understand the colonial era as much more than just a prelude to that nation-forming event. Until recently, [...]

“Hamas faces a terrible dilemma”: Shlomo Ben-Ami on the Palestinian election results

You predicted earlier this week that Abbas would resign if Hamas won and he seems to have done just that today. What is your reaction to this? and Who is running the PA now?

The results of the elections do not affect the status of President Abbas, although his own party was defeated. The [...]

The Palestinian Elections: 5 Questions for Shlomo Ben-Ami

Shlomo Ben-Ami is a former Foreign Minister of Israel and has been a key participant in many Arab-Israeli peace conferences, most notably the Camp David Summit in 2000. President Clinton says that his new book, Scars of War, Wounds of Peace: The Israeli-Arab Tragedy, “should be read by everyone who wants a just and lasting [...]

“Oh, my God, they’re going to burn us up!”

An excerpt from Freedom Riders: 1961 and the Struggle for Racial Justice by Raymond Arsenault. Arsenault will soon be on tour, roughly following the route of the original Freedom Rides. Click here for a map of the Rides/his tour.
On May 14, 1961, the two groups of Freedom Riders left Atlanta an hour apart. The Greyhound [...]

Slate picks up The Undercover Economist!

Slate.com readers got a taste on Saturday of what Financial Times readers have been enjoying for a long time now. Slate picked up the latest installment of Tim Harford’s “The Undercover Economist” column from the FT.
Which economic mystery of daily life does Harfod solve this week? “The Mystery of the Rude Waiter: Why my [...]

Lobbying Reform

Norman Ornstein and Thomas E. Mann opined in the New York Times yesterday that Congressional Republicans should go beyond their current proposals for lobbying reform and adopt rules changes, like 15 minute time limits on all votes and credible ethics oversight, that will ensure “a return to the regular order and to a reasonable deliberative [...]

Pride by Michael Eric Dyson

“A true revolution of values will soon look uneasily on the glaring contrast of poverty and wealth. With righteous indignation, it will look across the seas and see individual capitalists of the West investing huge sums of money in Asia, Africa and South America, only to take the profits out with no concern for the [...]

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