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Aborting Girls, Keeping Boys in China

July 24, 1993
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New technology often generates widely differing guesses of its impact on society. Not so with the widely available ultrasound scanner in China where married couples are prohibited by the government from having more than one or two children.As tens of thousands of these scanners, costing $1000 each, find their way to an emerging market economy…

Clinton, Anne Bingamon, and Antitrust

July 17, 1993
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“Many consumers have never heard of antitrust laws, but when these laws are effectively and responsibly enforced, they can save consumers millions and even billions of dollars a year in illegal overcharges. Most states have antitrust laws, and so does the federal government. Essentially, these laws prohibit business practices that unreasonably deprive consumers of the…

Letter to Clinton About Access to Him by Citizen Groups

July 9, 1993
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This is an open letter to President Bill Clinton. Dear President Clinton: In choosing which groups to speak before, and which individuals to meet with in the White House, Presidents send compelling signals about their character and their agendas. You have been President for almost six months and your meetings and audiences in Washington, D.C.,…

Media Obsession with Sensationalism

July 2, 1993
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It happens almost every day all over the country at the local, state and national scenes. Americans banding together wish to communicate a cause or publicize a protest to a larger audience over the media. They have news conferences, put out a report or petition and try to be newsworthy. But little or no media…

What PrimeTime Live Didn’t Tell You About Government Waste

June 25, 1993
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For the second time in six months, Prime Time Live (ABC-TV) and Sam Donaldson devoted one hour to more examples of waste in the federal government. A guided tour into the land of taxpayer-funded boondoggles, the program covered lots of ground. There was the $16 million to refurbish the underground Congressional subway to reduce the…

Overcommercialism

June 18, 1993
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Years ago, the word “overcommercialized” used to apply to highway billboards marring the landscape. Look what rampaging commercialism is now like. Item: Governor Branstad of Iowa is opening the state tax instruction booklet to advertisements by accounting firms, banks and other companies eager to reach 1.3 million individual taxpayers He wants to solicit ads for…

Breyer Nomination

June 11, 1993
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The Wall St. Journal editorial writers love him. Senators Dole and Hatch, who carry the water for big business subsidies, privileges and escapes from accountability, adore him. The corporate bar, made up of wealthy lawyers who work to entrench corporate power over people, are ecstatic. He is Judge Stephen G Breyer and Clinton’s leading nominee…

Virtual Reality

May 20, 1993
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The other night on Ted Koppel’s Nightline program, the subject was “virtual reality.” The dreamy definition of “virtual reality” (VR) by Jason Lanier, the man who coined the phrase, is that it is a computer generated, multi-media, interactive technology that will provide “a wonderful, inspirational future for the human imagination. I can’t put it any…

Humility Pledge Results

May 12, 1993
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With all the reform fervor advanced by the newly elected members of Congress, the faraway observer of the Washington scene might have begun to believe. After all, 110 new members of the House of Representatives, more than a quarter of the entire House, made up one of the largest and most determined new class in…

St. John’s Great Football Coach (MN)

May 7, 1993
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Collegeville, MN — This pleasant town is not the most likely place to find the most remarkable college football coach in America. Except, don’t call John Gagliardi “coach”; just say John or “Gags.” That advice is only one of many “No’s” that his players learn from the second-winningest active coach (Grambling’s Eddie Robinson is first)…