[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 146 (2000), Part 13]
[House]
[Pages 18441-18450]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO SENATOR DANIEL PATRICK MOYNIHAN
Mrs. MALONEY of New York. Mr. Speaker, I rise to pay tribute to
Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan. On behalf of my colleagues, Jimmy
Walsh and other Members of the New York delegation, I welcome Mrs.
Moynihan, Elizabeth Moynihan, who is with us in the gallery, and
Senator Moynihan.
He is one of our truly inspiring legislators. He has been a scholar,
a legislator, an ambassador, a cabinet officer, a presidential adviser
in four administrations, a witness, a teacher, a writer, and one of the
best Senators ever to grace the Halls of this institution.
He is unmatched in his ability to craft innovative solutions to
society's most pressing problems, from welfare to Social Security, to
transportation, to taxes. His legislative stamp is everywhere. Known
as, and I quote the Almanac of American Politics, ``the Nation's best
thinker among politicians since Lincoln, and its best politician among
thinkers since Jefferson,'' Senator Moynihan has moved people through
the power of his ideas. He is a unique figure in public life, a man of
pure intellect who is unafraid of speaking inconvenient truths.
Senator Moynihan's life exemplifies the American dream. He grew up in
a slum known as Hell's Kitchen. Abandoned by his father, his mother
became the sole supporter of the family during the Depression. Small
wonder that Senator Moynihan grew up to be a strong voice on welfare
issues.
He recognized the danger of fostering a culture of dependency while
understanding the importance of maintaining a strong safety net. He has
proved to be one of the most accurate prophets of our era. Time after
time, he has correctly predicted future consequences, even though many
refused to believe him when his prediction ran counter to conventional
wisdom.
In the 1960s, he expressed concern about the disintegration of the
African American family. In the 1980s, he predicted the coming collapse
of the Soviet Union. In the 1990's, he expressed concern about the
tendency of our society to define deviancy down. Antisocial behavior,
he warns, is tolerated at our peril.
For New Yorkers, Senator Moynihan has always been one of our
homegrown heroes, our proud gift to the Nation. Despite his reputation
for attention to the more scholarly pursuits, he authored 18 books.
Senator Moynihan has never forgotten those of us who elected him. He is
a hero to landmark preservationists for his effort to preserve the
Custom House and the Farley Post Office, the new train station on the
Farley site he helped plan and is continuing to fund, but it does not
have a name yet. I believe it should be named for Daniel Patrick
Moynihan.
When the Coast Guard left Governors Island, he persuaded President
Clinton to agree to give the island to New York for a dollar. I am
hopeful that in the last days of this Congress, we will be able to make
that pledge a reality.
As ambassador to the United Nations, he denounced the resolution
equating Zionism with racism. Seventeen years later, the U.N. reversed
itself, revoking this shameful resolution. Senator Moynihan was a prime
mover behind ISTEA, which changed the way highway and transportation
funds are distributed. He is widely credited with shifting
transportation priorities and making it possible for us to invest in
alternatives like high speed rail. As a member of the Senate Finance
Committee, he has been a guardian of Social Security; and most
recently, he has focused his attention on the importance of opening up
government filings and reducing secrecy in government.
I was proud to have worked with him on the passage of the Nazi War
Crimes Disclosure bill. After 50 years, Americans finally are beginning
to get a
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glimpse of the things that our government knew. Senator Moynihan has
also worked tirelessly on getting an accurate census for our country.
Senator Moynihan's absence will make the Senate a poorer place. I am
hopeful that he will remain in the public eye as a strong voice of
public conscience. We need him and we will miss him, and my colleagues
are here to join me in paying tribute to the great Senator from the
great State of New York, Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a true
American treasure.
Mr. Speaker, I will place into the Record his biography and a list of
his speeches. I also will place editorials and tributes that have
appeared recently in the papers of our country, applauding the work and
contributions of the great Senator from New York.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan
Daniel Patrick Moynihan is the senior United States Senator
from New York. First elected in 1976, Sen. Moynihan was re-
elected in 1982, 1988, and 1994.
Sen. Moynihan is the Ranking Minority Member of the Senate
Committee on Finance. He serves on the Senate Committee on
Environment and Public Works and the Senate Committee on
Rules and Administration. He also is a member of the Joint
Committee on Taxation and the Joint Committee on the Library
of Congress.
A member of the Cabinet or sub-Cabinet of Presidents
Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon and Ford, Sen. Moynihan is the only
person in American history to serve in four successive
administrations. He was U.S. Ambassador to India from 1973 to
1975 and U.S. Representative to the United Nations from 1975
to 1976. In February 1976 he represented the United States as
President of the United Nations Security Council.
Sen. Moynihan was born on March 17, 1927. He attended pubic
and parochial schools in New York City and graduated from
Benjamin Franklin High School in East Harlem. He went on to
attend the City College of New York for one year before
enlisting in the United States Navy. He served on active duty
from 1944 to 1947. In 1966, he completed twenty years in the
Naval Reserve and was retired. Sen. Moynihan earned his
bachelor's degree (cum laude) from Tufts University, studied
at the London School of Economics as a Fulbright Scholar, and
received his M.A. and Ph.D. from Tufts University's Fletcher
School of Law and Diplomacy.
Sen. Moynihan was a member of Averell Harriman's
gubernatorial campaign staff in 1954 and then served on Gov.
Harriman's staff in Albany until 1958. He was an alternate
Kennedy delegate at the 1960 Democratic Convention. Beginning
in 1961, he served in the U.S. Department of Labor as an
assistant to the Secretary, and later as Assistant Secretary
of Labor for Policy Planning and Research.
In 1966, Sen. Moynihan became Director of the Joint Center
for Urban Studies at Harvard University and the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. He has been a Professor of
Government at Harvard University, Assistant Professor of
Government at Syracuse University, a fellow at the Center for
Advanced Studies at Wesleyan University, and has taught in
the extension programs of Russell Sage College and the
Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations.
Sen. Moynihan is the recipient of 62 honorary degrees.
Sen. Moynihan is the author or editor of 18 books. He most
recent work is Secrecy: The American Experience, published in
the fall of 1998, an expansion of the report by the
Commission on Protecting and Reducing Government Secrecy.
Sen. Moyniahn, as Chairman of the Commission, led the first
comprehensive review in forty years of the Federal
Government's system of classifying and declassifying
information and granting clearances.
Since 1976 Sen. Moynihan has published an analysis of the
flow of funds between the Federal Government and New York
State. In 1992 the analysis became a joint publication with
the Taubman Center for State and Local Government at Harvard
University, and includes all fifty states.
Sen. Moynihan is a fellow of the American Association for
the Advancement of Science (AAAS). He was Chairman of the
AAAS's section on Social, Economic and Political Science
(1971-72) and a member of the Board of Directors (1972-73).
He also served as a member of the President's Science
Advisory Committee (1971-73). Sen. Moynihan was Vice Chairman
(1971-76) of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for
Scholars. He served on the National Commission on Social
Security Reform (1982-83) whose recommendations formed the
basis of legislation to assure the system's fiscal stability.
He was the founding Chairman of the Board of Trustees of
the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden (1971-85) and
serves as Regent of the Smithsonian Institution, having been
appointed in 1987 and again in 1995. In 1985, the Smithsonian
awarded him its Joseph Henry Medal.
In 1965, Sen. Moynihan received the Arthur S. Flemming
Awards, which recognizes outstanding young Federal employees,
for his work as ``an architect of the Nation's program to
eradicate poverty.'' He has also received the International
League of Human Rights Award (1975) and the John LaFarge
Award for Interracial Justice (1980). In 1983, he was the
first recipient of the American Political Science
Association's Hubert H. Humphrey Award for ``notable public
service by a political scientist.'' In 1984, Sen. Moynihan
received the State University of New York at Albany's
Medallion of the University in recognition of his
``extraordinary public service and leadership in the field
for education.'' In 1986, he received the Seal Medallion of
the Central Intelligence Agency and the Britannica Medal for
the Dissemination of Learning.
He has also received the Laetare Medal of the University of
Notre Dame (1992), the Thomas Jefferson Award for Public
Architecture from the American Institute of Architects
(1992), and the Thomas Jefferson Medal for Distinguished
Achievement in the Arts or Humanities from the American
Philosophical Society (1993). In 1994, he received the Gold
Medal Award ``honoring services to humanity'' from the
National Institute of Social Sciences. In 1997, the College
of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University awarded
Sen. Moynihan the Cartwright Prize. He was the 1998 recipient
of the Heinz Award in Public Policy ``for having been a
distinct and unique voice in the century--independent in his
convictions, a scholar, teacher, statesman and politician,
skilled in the art of the possible.''
Elizabeth Brennan Moynihan, his wife of 44 years, is an
architectural historian with a special interest in 16th
century Mughal architecture in India. She is the author of
Paradise as a Garden: In Persia and Mughal India (1979) and
numerous articles. Mrs. Moynihan is a former Chairman of the
Board of the American Schools of Oriental Research. She
serves as a member of the Indo-U.S. Subcommission on
Education and Culture, and the visiting committee of the
Freer Gallery of Art at the Smithsonian Institution. She is
Vice Chair of the Board of the National Building Museum, and
on the Trustees Council of the Preservation League of New
York State.
personal
Born March 16, 1927, Tulsa, OK.
Three children, Timothy Patrick, Maura Russell, and John
McCloskey; two grandchildren.
Reside in Washington, D.C. on Pennsylvania Avenue and near
Pindars Corners in Delaware County, Davenport, NY.
public service
Office of the Governor of the State of New York, W. Averell
Harriman, Albany, NY, 1955-58 Speech writer, Assistant to
Secretary Jonathan Bingham; Assistant Secretary for Reports,
1956; Acting Secretary, 1958.
Special Assistant to the Secretary of Labor, Washington,
DC, 1961-62.
Executive Assistant to the Secretary of Labor, Washington,
DC, 1962-63.
Assistant Secretary of Labor for Policy Planning and
Research, Washington, DC, 1963-65.
Assistant to the President for Urban Affairs, Washington,
DC, 1969-70.
Counselor to the President, Washington, DC, 1969-70.
Consultant to the President, Washington, DC, 1971-73.
Member, United States delegation to the Twenty-Sixth
General Assembly of the United Nations, United Nations, 1971.
U.S. Ambassador to India, New Delhi, India, 1973-75.
Permanent Representative to the United Nations, New York,
NY, 1975-76.
elected office
Candidate for New York City Council President, 1965.
U.S. Senator from New York, 1977-
Chairman, Committee on Finance, 1993-1994
Chairman, Committee on Environment and Public Works, 1992
U.S. Senate Committees
Committee on Finance, Ranking Minority Member.
Subcommittees: International Trade, Social Security and
Family Policy; and Taxation and IRS Oversight.
Committee on Environment and Public Works, second ranking
minority member.
Subcommittees: Superfund, Waste Control, and Risk
Assessment; and Transportation and Infrastructure.
Committee on Rules an Administration.
Joint Committee on the Library.
Joint Committee on Taxation.
Committee on Foreign Relations, 1987-95.
Committee on the Budget, 1977, 1979-86.
Committee on Commerce, 1977.
Select Committee on Intelligence 1977-85, Vice Chairman,
1981-85.
legislative achievements
West Valley Demonstration Project Act of 1980
Sponsor. Authorized U.S. Department of Energy to clean up
and remove 600,000 gallons of nuclear wastes stored at West
Valley, NY. Commits Federal government to convert liquid
wastes into a solid glass-like logs to be transported to a
permanent and secure Federal repository.
The Acid Precipitation Act (Became Title VII of the Energy
Security Act of 1980)
First federal legislation addressing the problem of acid
rain. Established a ten year
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program for research on the causes and effects of acid rain
and possible control strategies. Ultimately the Federal
government's largest scientific study outside NASA.
Clear Air Act Reauthorization of 1982
Mandated an eight million ton reduction in annual sulfur
dioxide emission in the eastern U.S. by January 1, 1995.
Social Security Act Amendments of 1983 (Greenspan Commission)
Chief Democratic sponsor of amendments guaranteeing
solvency of the Social Security system well into the 21st
century.
Water Resources Development Act of 1986
Authorized $1.1 billion for 33 New York water projects.
Obtained funding for the Erie Canal, Olcott Harbor, and Coney
Island.
Superfund Reauthorization Act of 1985
Principal cosponsor. Provided $8.5 billion over five years
to clean up toxic waste.
Tax Reform Act of 1986
One of the law's six principal drafters. Successfully
opposed attempts to eliminate the deduction for state and
local income and property taxes. Took millions of working
poor off tax rolls, lowered tax rates and closed tax shelters
and other loopholes.
Family Support Act of 1988
Author. Began process of transforming the Aid to Families
with Dependent Children (AFDC) program from an income
security program to one which helps individuals secure
employment.
Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990
Original cosponsor. First revision of the Clean Air Act
since 1977. The acid rain control provisions built upon the
first Federal legislation on acid rain: Moynihan's Acid
Precipitation Act of 1980 (see above).
Intermodeal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991
(ISTEA)
Chief author and sponsor of landmark legislation, known
commonly as ISTEA, which redirected Federal surface
transportation policy to include more spending for non
highway-related projects. Greatly increased the amount of
Federal Highway Trust Fund money to New York State which
received $12 billion in highway and transit funds over six
years and will be reimbursed $5 billion for the New York
State Thruway over 15 years.
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993
Led efforts to get the first Clinton budget through the
Finance Committee and the full Senate resulting in historic
deficit reduction and uninterrupted economic growth.
Social Security Domestic Employment Act of 1993 (``Nanny
Tax'')
Simplified requirements regarding the payment of Social
Security taxes due on wages paid to domestic employees.
Social Security Administration as an independent agency
(1994)
Author of bill to make the Social Security Administration
independent from the Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS) to restore public confidence, improve accountability
and insulate the SSA from undue political pressure.
Pennsylvania Station redevelopment
Leader of the redevelopment of Penn Station in Manhattan in
the James A. Farley Postal Building. Secured $315 million in
Federal, State, and private funds; established the
Pennsylvania Station Redevelopment Corp. to oversee
completion.
1994 Crime Bill--Ban on ``Cop-Killer'' bullets
Introduced and received Senate passage of legislation to
protect police officers from a new class of armor-piercing
ammunition. The bill extends the 1986 Law Enforcement
Officers Protection Act, also sponsored by Sen. Moynihan, to
prohibit this new type of ``cop-killer'' bullet.
Jerusalem Embassy Act of 1995
Principal sponsor with Senator Robert J. Dole of bill to
recognize Jerusalem as the Capital of the State of Israel and
to require the U.S. Embassy move from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem
by 1999.
Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center Act of
1995
Sponsor. Named the newest (and last) Federal Triangle
building after the former President. The Federal Triangle's
completion marks the end of the redevelopment of Pennsylvania
Avenue, a personal goal since the Kennedy Administration.
Taxpayers Relief Act of 1997
Repealed the cap on issuance of section 501 (c)(3) bonds
for universities, colleges, and non-hospital health
facilities.
Government Secrecy Act of 1997
Introduced with Senator Jesse Helms legislation recommended
by the Commission on Protecting and Reducing Government
Secrecy (of which Senator Moynihan chaired) to establish
principles on which Federal classification and
declassification programs are to be based.
Social Security Solvency Act of 1998
Introduced with Senator J. Robert Kerrey legislation to
save Social Security by reducing payroll taxes by almost $800
billion and returning to a pay-as-you go system. Also
requires benefit increases to accurately reflect the cost of
living and gradually phase in an increase in the retirement
age. Beginning in 2001 the bill would permit voluntary
personal savings accounts, which workers could finance with
the proceeds of the 2% cut in the payroll tax. And beginning
in 2003, retires could continue to collect benefits
regardless of how much they earn.
teaching and academic positions
Assistant in Government, Fletcher School of Law and
Diplomacy, Tuffs University, Medford, MA, 1949-50.
Lecture, Russell Sage College, Troy, NY, 1957-58.
Lecture, NYS School of Industrial Relations, Cornell
University, Ithaca, NY, 1959.
Assistant Professor of Political Science, Maxwell Graduate
School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse
University, Syracuse, NY, 1960-61.
Fellow, Center for Advanced Studies, Wesleyan University,
Middletown, CT, 1965-66.
Director, Joint Center for Urbana Studies, MIT and Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA, 1966-1969.
Professor of Education and Urbana Studies, MIT and Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA, 1969-73.
Professor of Government, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA,
1973-77.
courses taught
Harvard University
1971-72
Administration and Social Policy x-154. Social Science and
Social Policy--A review of the rise of social science
influence in the formulation of social policy with respect to
predominantly non-economic issues. Changing perceptions of
the political orientation of social science findings. Class
work concentrated on case studies drawn from recent American
experience
Administration and Social Policy x-227. Federal Policy
Toward Higher Education--This seminar considered the
emergency of Federal policy toward higher education in the
context of historical programs and the social policies which
they reflect, in order to define the choices implicit in the
adoption of a formal national policy.
Administration and Social Policy x-256. Social Science and
Education Policy--An exploration of recent and prospective
influences on educational policies of social science theory
and research. Included consideration of the policy making
processes within the educational system and various modes of
responses to social science findings.
1972-73
Government 251. Ethnicity in American Politics--An
historical inquiry into the role of ethnic group identity as
an organizing factor in American politics.
1976-77
Social Science 115. Social Science and Social Policy--And
examination of the influence of various social science
disciplines on the formulation of social policy.
1976-77
Government 216. Ethnicity in Politics--An historical and
theoretical enquiry into the role of ethnicity as an
organizing principle in modern politics.
fellowships
1969--Honorary Fellow, London School of Economics and
Political Science.
1971--Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of
Science.
1976--Chubb Fellow, Yale University.
lectureships
1985--Feingold Lecturer, Columbia University, New York, NY.
1985--Feinstone Lecturer, U.S. Military Academy, West
Point, NY.
1986--Godkin Lecturer, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA.
1986--Marnold Lecturer, New York University, New York. NY.
1987--Gannon Lecturer, Fordham University, Bronx, NY.
1991--Cyril Foster Lecturer, Oxford University, Oxford,
England.
honorary degrees
LL.D. LaSalle College, 1966.
LL.D. Seton Hall College, 1966.
D.P.A. Providence College, 1967.
D.H.L. University of Akron, 1967.
LL.D. Catholic University, 1968.
D.S.W. Dusquesne University, 1968.
D.H.L. Hamilton College, 1968.
LL.D. Illinois Institute of Technology, 1968.
LL.D. New School for Social Research, 1968.
LL.D. St. Louis University, 1968.
LL.D. Tufts University, 1968.
D.S.S. Villanova University, 1968.
LL.D. University of California, 1969.
LL.D. University of Notre Dame, 1969.
LL.D. Fordham University, 1970.
H.H.D. Bridgewater State College, 1972.
D.S. Michigan Technological University, 1972.
L.L.D. St. Bonaventure University, 1972.
LL.D. Indiana University, 1975.
LL.D. Boston College, 1976.
Ph.D. Hebrew University, 1976.
LL.D. Hofstra University, 1976.
LL.D. Ohio State University, 1976.
LL.D. St. Anselm's College, 1976.
D.H.L. Baruch College, 1977.
LL.D. Canisius College, 1977.
D.C.L. Colgate University, 1977.
LL.D. LeMoyne College, 1977.
LL.D. New York Law School, 1977.
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LL.D. Salem College, 1977.
LL.D. Hartwick College, 1978.
LL.D. Ithaca College, 1978.
D.H.L. Rabinnical College of America, 1978.
LL.D. Skidmore College, 1978.
LL.D. College of St. Rose, 1978.
LL.D. Yeshiva University, 1978.
LL.D. Brooklyn Law School, 1978.
D.H.L. Marist College, 1979.
LL.D. Pace University Law School, 1979.
LL.D. St. John Fisher College, 1980.
LL.D. Dowling College, 1981.
LL.D. Bar-Ilan University, 1982.
LL.D. New York Medical College, 1982.
LL.D. Pratt Institute, 1982.
LL.D. Rensselar Polytechnic Institute, 1983.
D.C.L. Union College, 1983.
D.S.I. Defense Intelligence College, 1984.
D.H.L. New York University, 1984.
LL.D. Syracuse University School of Law.
D.H.L. Bard College, 1985.
D.H.L. Hebrew Union College, 1986.
LL.D. Marymount Manhattan College, 1986.
LL.D. Columbia University, 1987.
LL.D. Touro College, 1991.
D.H.L. Hobart and William Smith College, 1992.
D.H.L. University of San Francisco, 1992.
D.C.L. St. Francis College, 1993.
LL.D. University of Rochester, 1994.
LL.D. Union College, 1995.
LL.D. Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, 1997.
D.H.L. Texas A&M University, 1998.
other positions
Budget Assistant, U.S. Air Force base, Ruislip, England,
1951-53.
Director of Public Relations, International Rescue
Committee (IRC), New York, NY 1954.
Human Rights Organization, assisted refugees forced to
leave their own countries through persecution.
Director, New York State Government Research Project,
Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, 1959-61.
commissions and committees
Member, New York State Tenure Commission, 1958-60.
Member, President's Council on Pennsylvania Avenue, 1962.
Vice-Chairman, President's Temporary Commission on
Pennsylvania Avenue, 1965-74.
Member, Advisory Committee on Traffic Safety, Department of
HEW, 1966-68.
Member, President's Science Advisory Committee, 1971-73.
education
Diploma, Benjamin Franklin High School, New York, NY, 1943.
City College of New York (1943-44), New York, NY, followed
by naval service.
B.N.S., Tufts University, Medford, MA, 1946.
B.A. (cum laude), Tufts University, Medford, MA, 1948.
M.A. Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts
University, Medford, MA, 1949.
Fulbright Scholarship, London School of Economics, London,
England, 1950.
Ph.D., Doctor of Philosophy, Fletcher School of Law and
Diplomacy, Tufts University, Medford, MA, 1961; thesis: The
U.S. and the I.L.O., 1889-1934.
democratic political experience
Volunteer, New York City Mayoral campaign of Robert F.
Wagner, 1953.
Secretary, Public Affairs Committee of the New York State
Democratic Party, 1958-60.
Member, New York State Delegation to the Democratic
National Convention, 1960, 1976. Authored position papers for
presidential campaign of Sen. John F. Kennedy, 1960.
naval service
1944-45--V-12 Naval Officer training program, Middlebury,
VT.
1945--ROTC Tufts University/B.N.S., 1946.
1947--Communications, Gunnery Officer, U.S.S. Quirinus.
medals
The American Campaign Medal.--Given to those in service
between 1941 and 1946. Recipient must have served outside the
United States for 30 days or within the United States for one
year.
The Naval Reserve Medal.--For ten years of honorable
service in the Naval Reserve.
World War II Victory Medal.--For service in the U.S. Armed
Forces, 1941-1846.
books
Beyond the Melting Pot (with Nathan Glazer), The MIT Press,
Cambridge, MA, 1963.
Study of ethnic life in American society and politics.
Questioned contemporary conception of America as homogenous
society and in which group differences were disappearing.
(Winner of the Ansfield-Wolf Award in Race Relations)
The Defenses of Freedom: The Public Papers of Arthur J.
Goldberg, ed., Harper & Roe, New York, NY, 1966.
Papers of the Supreme Court Justice and American Ambassador
to the United Nations.
Maximum Feasible Misunderstanding, The Free Press, New
York, NY, 1969.
On the role of community action in the war on poverty and
why the Johnson Administration's poverty program failed to
fulfill expectations.
On Understanding Poverty, ed., Basic Books Inc., New York,
N.Y. 1969.
A collection of essays by leading academics and experts in
the field of poverty studies.
Toward a National Urban Policy,, ed., Basic Books Inc., New
York, NY, 1970.
Essays by academics and urban experts on a range of
subjects related to urban affairs, including housing urban
planning, transportation, crime, health, education, and race.
On Equality of Educational Opportunity, ed. (with Frederick
Mosteller), Random House, New York, NY, 1972.
Papers from the Harvard University Faculty Seminar on the
Coleman Report ``Equality of Educational Opportunity.'' The
Report demonstrated that minority schools were not especially
unequal in their facilities and that neither teacher-pupil
ratios nor per-pupil expenditures were directly related to
academic achievement.
The Politics of A Guaranteed Income, Random House, New
York, NY, 1973.
An explanation of the Family Assistance Plan (FAP) which
guaranteed minimum income to families with children and why
the proposal was defeated.
Coping: On the Practice of Government, Random House, New
York, NY, 1973.
Essays on a range of subjects encountered during government
service: welfare, political reform, race relations, traffic
safety, education, urban affairs. Discusses how the trained
social scientist can contribute to the practice of
government.
Ethnicity: Theory and Experience, ed. (with Nathan Glazer),
Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1975.
A collection of essays by academics and social commentators
on the meaning and significance of ethnicity in modern
society.
A Dangerous Place (with Suzanne Weaver), Little, Brown &
Company, Boston, MA, 1978.
A testimonial from term as Ambassador to the United
Nations. Recounts battle against Arab sponsored and Soviet
inspired U.N. resolution equating Zionism with racism.
Counting our Blessings, Little, Brown & Company, Boston,
MA, 1980.
A collection of essays on foreign policy, the judicial
system, domestic and regional economic policy, arms control
and other issues. Argues, among other things for public aid
to nonpublic schools and that the Nation stress human rights
as a priority in international relations.
Loyalties, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, New York, NY, 1984.
On the history and meaning of the arms race, respect for
international law, and the Communist theory of racism applied
to those who opposed Soviet totalitarianism. The book argues
for loyalty to principals of law, rights and humanity.
Family and Nation, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, New York, NY,
1986.
On the disintegration of the American family. Argues for
the establishment of a national policy to support and enhance
the viability of families.
Came the Revolution: Argument in the Reagan Era, Harcourt
Brace Jovanovich, New York, NY, 1988.
A collection of speeches, essays and other writings from
1981-1986.
On the Law of Nations, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
MA, 1990.
An examination of international law and the history of
American internationalism in the twentieth century.
Pandaemonium: Ethnicity in International Politics, Oxford
University Press Inc., New York, NY, 1993.
An account of ethnicity as an elemental force in
international politics. How the power of ethnicity defied
both the liberal myth of the melting pot and the Marxist
prediction of proletarian internationalism.
Miles to Go: A Personal History of Social Policy, Harvard
University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1996.
A personal analysis of the changing welfare state and the
nation's social strategies over the last half-century. Topics
include welfare, family disintegration, health care, social
deviance, addiction, and broader views on civil rights and
capitalism.
Secrecy: The American Experience, Yale University Press,
New Haven, CT, 1998.
A history of government secrecy in America since World War
I. Based on findings as Chairman of the Commission on
Protecting and Reducing Government Secrecy (1995-1997).
Secrecy is a mode of government regulation, indeed, ``it is
the ultimate mode for the citizen does not even know that he
or she is being regulated.''
HONORS AND AWARDS
Meritorious Service Award of the U.S. Department of Labor
(1963)
For exceptional service as Staff Director of the
President's Task Force on Employee-Management Relations and
for outstanding contributions to development of the policy of
Employee-Management Cooperation in the Federal Service.
Arthur S. Fleming Award as an ``Architect of the Nation's War
on Poverty'' (1965)
Awarded to the ten most outstanding young men and women in
the Federal service. Selected by an independent panel of
judges.
International League of Human Rights Award (1975)
For extraordinary commitment to international human rights.
Oldest human rights award in the nation.
[[Page 18445]]
John LaFarge Award for Interracial Justice (1980)
Given by the Catholic Interracial Council (NY) for
commitment and leadership in fighting racism and
discrimination.
American Political Science Association's Hubert H. Humphrey
Award (1983)
First recipient of the award for ``notable public service
by a political scientist.''
Medallion of the University, State University of New York at
Albany (1984)
For extraordinary service to the University and to
education. The highest award for distinguished service the
university bestows.
Henry Medal of the Smithsonian Institution (1985)
Presented by the Board of Regents for outstanding service
to the Smithsonian Institution.
Seal Medallion of the Central Intelligence Agency (1986)
In recognition of outstanding accomplishment as vice-
chairman of the Senate Committee on Intelligence from
February 1977 to January 1985.
Britannica Medal for the Dissemination of Learning and the
Enrichment of Life (1986)
Presented by Encyclopedia Britannica. The award's first
recipient.
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center Medal (1986)
For distinguished service and outstanding achievement in
the cancer field.
Gold Medal, American-Irish Historical Society (1986)
In appreciation of significant service rendered to the
cause of Ireland.
Natan Sharansky Humanitarian Award, Rockland Committee for
Soviet Jewry (1987)
For distinguished achievement on behalf of human rights and
noble efforts in support of Soviet Jewry and the Jewish
people throughout the world.
Honor Award, National Building Museum (1989)
For fostering excellence in the built environment. Received
for championing the resurrection of Pennsylvania Avenue, for
promoting quality in federal building programs, and for
leading efforts to rebuild the nation's deteriorating
infrastructure.
Wolfgang Friedmann Award, (Columbia University School of Law
(1991)
For outstanding contributions to the field of international
law. Given by the Columbia School of Law's Journal of
Translational Law.
President's Medal, Municipal Art Society of New York (1992)
President to an individual whose accomplishments have made
an enduring contribution to urban life in America and
especially to the City of New York.
Thomas Jefferson Award for Public Architecture, American
Institute of Architects (1992)
For advocacy furthering the public's awareness and/or
appreciation of design excellence.
Laetare Medal, University of Notre Dame (1992)
The University's highest honor. Given to those who have
``ennobled the arts and sciences, illustrated the ideals of
the Church, and enriched the heritage of humanity.'' Regarded
as the most significant annual award conferred upon Catholics
in the United States. Selected by a committee headed by the
president of Notre Dame.
Thomas Jefferson Medal, American Philosophical Society (1993)
The society's most prestigious medal in recognition of
distinguished achievement in the arts, humanities, or social
sciences.
Distinguished Leadership Award, American Ireland Fund (1994)
In recognition of the Senator's long-time interest in and
concern for Irish causes.
The Gold Medal Award for Distinguished Service to Humanity
(1994)
Presented by the National Institute of Social Sciences.
United Jerusalem Award, Union of Orthodox Jewish
Congregations (1994)
Awarded to ``the single most consistent, thoughtful, and
articulate champion of a united Jerusalem in the United
States Congress.''
Profiles in Courage Award, American Jewish Congress (1996)
For significant and courageous contributions to the cause
of democracy and human freedom at home and abroad.
Award for Public Service Excellence (1996)
Presented by the Association of American Medical Colleges.
For ``visionary leadership in the U.S. Senate as a champion
for the education, research, and patient care missions of our
nation's medical schools and teaching hospitals.''
Cartwright Prize, Columbia University (1997)
Presented by the College of Physicians and Surgeons at
Columbia University for ``outstanding contributions to
medicine.'' The first non-physician to be honored.
John Heinz Award (1999)
current memberships
Aleph Society, New York, NY.
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Cambridge, MA.
American Association for the Advancement of Science,
Washington, DC.
American Heritage Dictionary, Usage Panel.
American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, PA.
American Antiquarian Society, Worches-
ter, MA.
Bedford-Stuyvesant Development and Service Corporation, New
York, NY.
Century Association, New York, NY.
Committee on the Constitutional System, Washington, DC.
Corporation for Maintaining Editorial Diversity in America,
Washington, DC.
Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy (Board of Trustees),
Medford, MA.
Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute, Hyde Park, NY.
Harvard Club, New York, N.Y.
Irish Georgian Society, New York, NY.
Jacob K. Javits Foundation, Inc. (Board of Trustees), New
York, NY.
Jerome Levy Economic Institute at Bard College (Board of
Trustees), Annandale-on-Hudson, NY.
The Maxwell School (Board of Trustees), Syracuse, NY.
National Academy of Social Insurance, Washington, NY.
National Democratic Institute for International Affairs,
Washington, NY.
New York Landmarks Conservancy, New York, NY.
Project on Ethnic Relations, Princeton, NJ.
The Public Interest/National Affairs, Inc., Washington, DC.
Regent, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC (Appointed
1987 and 1995).
The Harry S Truman Research for the Advancement of Peace,
New York, NY.
prior memberships
President's Science Advisory Committee (1971-73).
American Association for Advancement of Science Council
1971; Member, Board of Directors, 1972-73; Chairman, Social,
Economic and Political Science Section, 1971-72.
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars; Vice
Chairman (1971-76), Board of Trustees (1969-76).
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Founding Chairman;
Board of Trustees (1971-85).
reports and government documents
Executive Order 10988, ``Employee-Management Cooperation in
the Federal Service.'' Approved by President John F. Kennedy
January 17, 1962. Permitted Federal government employees to
join unions or other employee organizations.
``Report to the President by the Ad Hoc Committee on
Federal Office Space,'' Committee on Public Works, U.S. House
of Representatives, U.S. Government Printing Office,
Washington, DC, June 1, 1962. Includes reports on the
redevelopment of Pennsylvania Avenue and architectural
guidelines for Federal office buildings.
``One Third of a Nation,'' report of the Task Force on
Manpower Conservation, submitted to President Lyndon B.
Johnson January 1, 1964 (Task Force included the Director of
the Selective Service System and the Secretaries of Defense,
Health, Education, and Welfare, and Labor). Concluded that
one-third of draft-age men were unfit for military service
and called for manpower conservation program to give physical
training and medical attention as necessary to meet national
standards.
``The Negro Family: The Case for National Action,'' Office
of Policy Planning and Research, U.S. Department of Labor,
March 1965.
Report on Traffic Safety, Secretary's Advisory Committee on
Traffic Safety, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare, February 29, 1968 (commonly known as The Moynihan
Report on Traffic Safety).
``Toward a More Accurate Measure of the Cost of Living,''
report to the U.S. Senate Finance Committee from the Advisory
Commission to Study the Consumer Price Index (Boskin
Commission), December 4, 1996. Concluded that using the CPI
as cost of living index--which it is not--creates enormous
costs to the Federal government in increased outlays and
decreased revenues. The present upward bias is 1.1 percent
points per year over the next decade, an overstatement of
roughly one-third. The Commission states: ``The bias alone
would be the fourth largest Federal program.''
``Secrecy'' Commission on Protecting and Reducing
Government Secrecy, Chairman. Appendix: ``Secrecy` A Brief
History of the American Experience,'' March 4, 1997.
``Memorandum of Points and Authorities of Senator Robert C.
Byrd, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, and Carl Levin as Amici Curiae
in Support of Plaintiff's Motions to Declare Line Item Veto
Act Unconstitutional,'' November 26, 1997. Brief filed in the
case The City of New York v. Clinton, the lawsuit brought by
New York City challenging the constitutionality of the Line
Item Veto Act of 1996. In a 6-3 decision on June 25, 1998 the
Supreme Court ruled the Line Item Veto Act unconstitutional.
Perhaps the most important case on legislative-executive
relations in the history of the Court.
[[Page 18446]]
introductions/forewords
Children, Poverty, and Family Allowances, by James C.
Vatican, 1968. Foreword.
Will They Ever Finish Bruckner Boulevard? by Ada Louise
Huxtable, 1970. Preface.
The Injury Industry and the Remedy of No-Fault Insurance,''
1971. Foreword
That Most Distressful Nation: The Taming of the American
Irish by Andrew M. Greeley, 1972. Foreword.
``Ending Insult to Injury: No-Fault Insurance for Products
and Services,'' 1975. Foreword.
A Cartoon History of U.S. Foreign Policy, 1975. Foreword.
A Cartoon History of United States Foreign Policy, 1776-
1976, by the editors of the Foreign Policy Association, 1975.
Introduction.
Drawings, by David Levine, March 4, 1976. Introduction.
The Catskills: Land in the Sky, by John G. Mitchell, 1977.
Preface.
Education and the Presidency, by Chester E. Finn, Jr.,
1977. Foreword.
Encounters with Kennan: The Great Debate, by George Kennan
et al., 1979. Introduction.
Best Editorial Cartoons, 1980. Introduction.
``Do They Tell You What to Draw?'' A Decade of Political
Cartoons by Hy Rosen, October 1980. Introduction.
``So How Come You Stay in Albany?'' A Decade of Cartoons,
1980. Introduction.
No Margin for Error: America in the Eighties, by Sen.
Howard H. Baker, Jr., 1980. Introduction.
``Another Opinion: A Labor Viewpoint,'' 1980. Introduction.
A Portrait of the Irish in America, by William D. Griffin,
1981. Introduction.
Strategies for the 1980s: Lessons of Cuba, Vietnam, and
Afghanistan, by Philip van Slack, 1981. Foreword.
There You Go Again, by G. Fisher, 1987. Foreword.
Government by Choice: Inventing the United States
Constitution, by Elizabeth P. McCaughey, 1987. Foreword.
Caste and Class in a Southern Town, by John Dollard, 1988.
Introduction.
Government By Choice, 1989. Foreword.
Disraeli, A Picture of the Victorian Age, by Andre Maurois,
1989. Foreword.
A Blue Moonray in My Kitchen, by Gabriel Aubouin, September
1991. Foreword.
Autobiography of Robert J. Myers, 1992. Foreword.
India and the United States: Estranged Democracies, by
Dennis Kux, 1992. Introduction.
DANA: The President's Man, by Douglass Cater, 1995,
Preface.
The Tyranny of Numbers, by Nicholas Eberstadt, 1995.
Foreword.
The Torment of Secrecy, by Edward A. Shils, 1996.
Introduction.
Great American Railroad Stations, 1996. Foreword.
Welfare: Indicators of Dependency, by Paul E. Barton, 1998.
Foreword.
Between Friends: Perspectives on J. K. Galbraith,
``Galbraith as Neighbor,'' 1998. Contributor.
A Passion for Truth: The Selected Writings of Eric
Breindel, ed. By John Podhortez, 1998.
the federal budget and the states
An annual report since 1976 on the balance of payments
between New York State and the Federal government. ``The
Fisc'' compares the amount of taxes New York sends to
Washington each fiscal year with the amount of all forms of
Federal outlays received (social security, welfare, defense
spending, Federal contracts, etc.). ``The Fisc'' has expanded
to include all 50 states and is now published jointly with
the Taubman Center for State and Local Government at the John
F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.
Publications
The Federal Government and the Economy of New York State,
Fiscal Year 1976.
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1977.
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1978.
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1979.
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1980.
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1981.
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1982--``Is Anybody
Listening?''
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1983--``A Further
Report on Manufactures.''
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1984--``A disposition
to be just . . . to all parts of the country.''
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1985--``The Deficit
Becomes Structural.''
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1986--``Second Decade
Thoughts.''
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1987--``Useful
Knowledge.''
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1988--``Reality Sets
In.''
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1989--``Deficit by
Default.''
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1990--``Reflections at
Fifteen.''
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1991--``Who Cheated NY
out of $136 Billion?''
New York State and the Federal Fisc, 1992--``Baumol's
Disease.''
The Federal Budget and the States, 1993--``Outside the
Paradigm.'' With Monica E. Friar and Herman B. Leonard.
Published jointly with the Taubman Center for State and Local
Government, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA.
The Federal Budget and the States, 1994--``Reagan's
Revenge.'' With Monica E. Friar and Herman B. Leonard.
The Federal Budget and the States, 1995--``A Culture of
Waste.'' With Monica E. Friar, Herman B. Leonard and Jay H.
Walder.
The Federal Budget and the States, 1996--``Routinely
Shortchanged.'' With Herman B. Leonard and Jay H. Walder.
The Federal Budget and the States, 1997--``Work in
Progress.'' With Herman B. Leonard and Jay H. Walder.
The Federal Budget and the States, 1998--``A Grand
Compromise?'' With Herman B. Leonard and Jay H. Walder.
articles
``Epidemic on the Highways.'' The Reporter, April 30, 1959.
``New Roads and Urban Chaos.'' The Reporter, April 14,
1960.
``Changing Governors and Police.'' Public Administration,
Autumn 1960.
``Passenger Car Design and Highway Safety.'' West Point
Conference on Vehicle Safety and Design, 1961.
``How Catholics Feel About Federal School Aid.'' The
Reporter, April 25, 1961.
``When the Irish Ran New York.'' The Reporter, June 8,
1961.
``Bosses and Reformers: A Profile on New York Democrats.''
Commentary, June 1961.
``The Question of the States.'' Commonweal, October 12,
1962.
``Politics in a Pluralist Democracy: Studies of Voting in
1960 Elections.'' Commentary, October 1964.
``Draft Rejectees: Nipping Trouble in the Bud.'' The
Reporter, February 13, 1964.
``Patronage in New York State.'' The American Political
Science Review, June 1964.
``United States Traffic Accident Statistics Useless.''
American Trial Lawyers, June/July 1965.
``Breakthrough of Ljubljana.'' The National Jewish Monthly,
September 1965.
``Behind Los Angeles Jobless Negroes and the Boom.'' The
Reporter, September 9, 1965.
``A Family Policy.'' Daedalus--Journal of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences, Fall 1965.
``Employment, Income, and the Ordeal of the Negro.''
Daedalus, Fall 1965.
``The Professionalization of Reform.'' The Public Interest,
Fall 1965.
``The War Against the Automobile.'' The Public Interest,
Spring 1966.
``The Negro Family in the U.S..'' Commonweal, April 1966.
``(Review of book by E. Franklin Frazier.)
``Who Gets in the Army?'' The New Republic, November 5,
1966.
``The President and the Negro: The Moment Lost.''
Commentary, February, 1967.
``Social Goals and Indicators for American Society.''
Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social
Sciences, May, 1967.
``Next: A New Auto Insurance Policy.'' The New York Times
Magazine, August 27, 1967.
``Sources of Resistance to the Coleman Report.'' Harvard
Educational Review, 1968.
``Toward a National Urban Policy.'' The Public Interest,
Fall 1969.
``Politics as the Art of the Impossible.'' The American
Scholar, Autumn 1919.
``What's Wrong with Welfare--Answers from Nixon's
Adviser.'' U.S. News & World Report, June 1970.
``Policy vs. Program in the 70s.'' The Public Interest,
Summer 1970.
``The Need to Move Beyond Programs to Policy in the Federal
System.'' State Government, Autumn 1970.
``The Presidency and the Press.'' Commentary, March, 1971.
``Social Welfare: Government vs. Private Efforts.''
Foundation News, March-April 1972.
``Back to Earth.'' Cry California, Spring 1972.
``The Schism in Black America.'' The Public Interest,
Spring 1972.
``How the President Sees His Second Terms.'' Life,
September 1, 1972.
``Equalizing Education: In Whose Benefit?'' The Public
Interest, Fall 1972.
``Address to the Entering Class of Harvard.'' Commentary,
December 1972.
``Income by Right.'' The New Yorker, January 13, 1973.
`` `Peace'--Some Thoughts in the 1960s and 1970s.'' The
Public Interest, Summer 1973.
``A Country in Need of Praise.'' Saturday Review/World,
September 11, 1973.
``Was Woodrow Wilson Right? Morality and American Foreign
Policy.'' Commentary, May 1974.
``Why Ethnicity?'' Commentary, October 1974 (with Nathan
Glazer).
``India--No Margin for Error.'' Reader's Digest, November
1974.
``Burma.'' Holiday, January 1975.
``The Politics of Higher Education.'' Daedalus, Winter
1975.
``The U.S. in Opposition.'' Commentary, March 1975.
``George A. Wiley: A Memoir.'' The Crisis, April 1975.
``Presenting the American Case.'' The American Scholar,
Fall 1975.
``A Diplomat's Rhetoric.'' Harpers, January 1976.
``The Totalitarian Terrorists.'' New York, July 26, 1976.
``Abiotrophy in Turtle Bay: The United Nations in 1975.''
Harvard International Law Journal, Summer 1976.
[[Page 18447]]
``On U.S. Support for the World Bank Loan to Chile.'' The
New York Times, January 4, 1977.
``The State, the Church, and the Family.'' The Urban and
Social Change Review, Winter 1977.
``The Liberal's Dilemma.'' The New Republic, January 22,
1977.
``Party and International Politics.'' Commentary, February
1977.
``Meeting the Ideological Challenge.'' The Washington Post,
March 19, 1977.
``As Our Third Century Begins--The Quality of Life.''
Across the Board, May 1977.
``The Most Important Decision-Making Process.'' Policy
Review, Summer 1977.
``The Challenge to Liberalism.'' The New Leader, June 6,
1977.
``Defenders and Invaders.'' The Washington Post, June 13,
1977 (Excerpt from address at the Capitol Page School
commencement).
``Freedom, Communism, and Poverty.'' The Chicago Tribune,
June 24, 1977 (Excerpts from June 9, 1977 Baruch College
Commencement address.
``The Soviets Do Tap Our Phones.'' The Philadelphia
Inquirer, July 17, 1977.
``Forum: Professors, Politicians and Public Policy.'' AEI
Forums, July 29, 1977.
``The Politics of Human Rights.'' Commentary, August 1977.
``Can Private Universities Maintain Excellence.'' Change,
August 1977.
``Creative Proposals Will Come--Slowly.'' Phi Delta Kappan,
September 1977.
``Aid for Parochial Schools.'' Catholic Mind, September
1977.
``Book Review: A Passion for Equality.'' The New Republic,
November 5, 1977.
``The Politics of Human Rights.'' Reader's Digest, December
1977.
``Carter Welfare Plan Disappointing.'' The Advocate,
February 1978.
``Avoiding the Next War Between the States.'' Newsday,
February 6, 1978.
``The Aging of America: Implications for Secondary
Education.'' Andover Bulletin, March 1978.
``Why Private Schools Merit Public Aid.'' The Washington
Post, March 5, 1978.
``Government and the Ruin of Private Education.'' Harpers,
April 1978.
``New York, New York: What Next, What Next.'' Daily News,
April 6, 1978.
``Welfare Reform and Congress.'' Journal of the Institute
for Socio-Economic Studies, Spring 1978.
``The Politics and Economics of Regional Growth.'' The
Public Interest, Spring 1978.
``The Roots of Success.'' Family Circle, April 24, 1978.
``Is There a Crisis of Spirit in the West?'' Public
Opinion, May/June 1978.
``Imperial Government.'' Commentary, June 1978.
``On America and the Dissidents.'' Daily News, July 16,
1978.
``Saying it Their Way.'' Daily News, July 27, 1978.
``Capitalism Faces Tough Test in World Arena.'' Commitment,
Summer 1978.
``Should Federal Aid Be Given to Private Schools?''
Instructor, September 1978.
``Words and Foreign Policy.'' Policy Review, Fall 1978.
``Distortions of Political Language.'' The Washington Post,
November 21, 1978.
``Editor's Focus.'' Public Welfare, Winter 1978.
``Volunteerism Needs to Survive.'' Community Focus,
December 1978.
``The Case for Tuition Tax Credits.'' Phi Delta Kappan,
December 1978.
``Some Negative Evidence Against the Negative Income Tax.''
Fortune, December 4, 1978.
``Social Science and the Courts.'' The Public Interest,
Winter 1979.
``The U.S. Cannot Abandon World Press Freedom.'' The
Reporter Dispatch (White Plains, NY), March 22, 1979.
``UNESCO and Freedom of the Press.'' Syracuse Herald
Journal, April 9, 1979.
``A Subtle Change.'' Syracuse Herald Journal, April 10,
1979.
``Patterns of Ethnic Succession: Blacks and Hispanics in
New York City.'' Political Science Quarterly, Spring 1979.
``Private Schools and the First Amendment.'' The National
Review, August 3, 1979.
``What Do You Do When the Supreme Court is Wrong?'' The
Public Interest, Fall 1979.
``Government Aid to Non-government Schools.'' Catholic
Mind, September 1979.
``Exporting Anti-Semitism.'' The New Leader, November 5,
1979.
``Will Russia Blow Up?'' Newsweek, November 1979.
``Reflections: The SALT Process.'' The New Yorker, November
19, 1979.
``On the Subject of the First Amendment.'' Thought,
December 1979.
``Social Science and the Courts.'' The Public Interest,
Winter 1979.
``Technology and Human Freedom.'' Syracuse Scholar, Winter
1979/80.
``Anti-Semitic Plague from Moscow.'' Jewish Digest, January
1980.
``Russians Play Politics So Put'em in Penalty Box.'' Daily
News, January 20, 1980.
``What Will They Do for New York?'' The New York Times
Magazine, January 27, 1980.
``And This, Then, Is Our Moment of Maximum National
Peril.'' Boston Herald American, January 29, 1980.
``The Issue: Will We Bear the Cost of Defending Liberty?''
Boston Herald American. January 30, 1980.
``A New American Foreign Policy.'' The New Republic,
February 9, 1980.
``From the Third Reich to the Third via Moscow.'' The
American Zionist, February/March 1980.
``The Great Game the Russians Won.'' Parade (with Liz
Moynihan), May 11, 1980.
``On the Hostaging of Westway to the EPA.'' Daily News, May
15, 1980.
``Of Sons' and Their `Grandsons'.'' The New York Times,
July 7, 1980.
``Rescuing the Family.'' America, July 19-26, 1980.
``Maxims for Democrats.'' The New Republic, August 16,
1980.
``A Pattern of Failure.'' The Wall Street Journal, August
19, 1980.
``Remembering John Dollard.'' The New York Times Book
Review,'' November 9, 1980.
``Washington vs. The Universities,'' Harper's, December
1980.
``The Payoff. . . Feds to Northeast Drop Dead.'' Daily
News, January 27, 1981.
``Joining the Jackals: The U.S. at the U.N., 1977-80.''
Commentary, February 1981.
``The Imprudence of Forcing a Balanced Budget,'' The Wall
Street Journal, March 18, 1981.
``Children and Welfare Reform,'' Journal of the Institute
for Socioeconomic Studies, Spring 1981.
``Beyond 96-0.'' The New York Times, May 22, 1981.
``Floccinaucinihiliplification.'' The New Yorker, August
10, 1981.
``Tax Reform Lives!'' The New York Times, August 23, 1981.
``Betraying Our Compact with Labor.'' Buffalo Courier-
Express, December 27, 1981.
``One-third of a Nation.'' The New Republic, June 9, 1982.
``It's Time for the U.S. to Rally Behind Israel.'' New York
Post, April 7, 1982.
``Managing Money,'' The New York Times, June 22, 1982.
``Israel Gives West a Rare Opportunity.'' New York Post,
June 24, 1982.
``Why Indira Ghandi is Here.'' The Washington Post, July
29, 1982.
``Put Youth to Work on the Public Lands.'' USA Today,
November 15, 1982.
``Thinking Clearly on Police and Crime,'' Respect, January
1983.
``Centralize Trade Policy.'' The New York Times, January
16, 1983.
``More than Social Security was at Stake,'' The Washington
Post, January 18, 1983
``Should Congress Enact the proposed `American Conservation
Corps Act of 1983'?'' Congressional Digest, May 1983.
``The Way to Make Congress's Life Easier.'' The New York
Times, June 26, 1983.
``The Nuclear Challenge.'' Catholicism in Crisis (May 15,
1983 Daemen College Commencement Address, Buffalo, NY), July
1983.
``Reagan's MX Plan Commits U.S. to First Strike.'' Newsday,
July 26, 1983.
``Reagan's Bankrupt Budget.'' The New Republic, December
31, 1983.
``Should Congress Enact Legislation to Provide Tax Credits
for Nonpublic School Tuition?'' Congressional Digest, January
1984.
``Indifference to International Law.'' Congress Monthly,
January/February 1984.
``The Kremlin After Andropov.'' New York Post, February 13,
1984.
``Nurturing Terrorism.'' Harpers, March 1984.
``Zionism, the United Nations and American Foreign
Policy.'' Catholicism in Crisis, April 1984.
``U.S. Has Abandoned International Law.'' Newsday, April
13, 1984.
``India's Gift for Pageantry,'' TV Guide (with Elizabeth
Moynihan), April 21-27, 1984.
``International Law and International Order,'' Syracuse
Journal of International Law and Commerce, Summer 1984.
``Preserving a Pillar of Crisis Stability,'' Christian
Science Monitor, July 9, 1984.
``Should the CIA Fight Secret Wars:'' Harper's, September
1984.
``Richard Rovere,'' The New Yorker, September 17,1984.
``Dn=D0 (a+r) n=A Formula for
Trouble,'' The New York Times, November 21, 1984.
``Tax Changes That Would Hurt New York.'' The New York
Times, November 21, 1984.
``The Irish Among Us.'' Reader's Digest, January 1, 1985.
``It's a Nice Place for a Parade Now.'' The Washington
Post, January 21, 1985.
``The Case of the Reluctant Spy.'' The New York Times Book
Review, February 17, 1985.
``How to Make Sure There's Enough Good Water.'' U.S. News &
World Report, March 18, 1985.
``Budget Process' is an Oxymoron.'' The New York Times,
March 20, 1985.
``On the Condition of American Liberalism.'' American
Spectator (symposium), April 1985.
``Indira Ghandi & Democracy.'' Freedom at Issue, May-June
1985.
``An Assault on Federalism.'' Seattle Times, June 21, 1985.
``Reagan's Inflate-the-Deficit Game.'' The New York Times,
July 21, 1985.
``Red Ink Was Brewed a Purgative.'' The Wall Street
Journal, August 16, 1985.
``The Paranoid Style in American Politics Revisited.'' The
Public Interest, Fall 1985.
``At 40, U.N. Needs a Firmer U.S.'' The New York Times,
September 17, 1985.
[[Page 18448]]
``Extension, Reforms Urged for Trade Adjustment Act.''
Journal of Commerce (with Sen. William V. Roth, Jr.),
September 30, 1985.
``Tax Reform in Public Education.'' Journal (NYSSBA),
October 1985.
``How Has the United States Met its Major Challenges Since
1945?'' Commentary, November 1985.
``The Potemkin Palace.'' The National Interest, Winter
1985/86.
``Senator Moynihan's Spy Story.'' Reader's Digest (from
Senator's constituent newsletter), January 1986.
``Revenue Sharing to Aid Cities, Towns, Counties, Worth
Fighting For,'' Rochester Democrat & Chronicle, February 2,
1986.
``A Family Policy for the Nation.'' America, March 22, 1986
(reprint of September 18, 1965 issue).
``The Family and the Nation--1986.'' America, Mach 22,
1986.
``The Links Between LaRouche and New York Corruption.'' The
New York Times, April 1, 1986.
``What Wretched Refuse?'' New York, May 12, 1986.
``Tax Overhaul Takes Wing.'' Newsday, May 18, 1986.
``Political Aids.'' The New Republic, May 26, 1986.
``Constitutional Dimensions to State and Local Tax.''
Publius, Summer 1986.
``Focus on Children and Poverty: The Family Economic
Security Act.'' APA Newsletter, Summer 1986.
``The Diary of a Senator.'' Newsweek, August 25, 1986.
``Congress Has Destroyed Equal Treatment for Public and
Private Education.'' Chronicle of Higher Education (text of
Marymount speech), November 12, 1986.
``Report's Error Would Make Beneficial Law.'' USA Today,
November 12, 1986.
``When Washington Bends the Law.'' U.S. News & World
Report, December 8, 1986.
``Reagan's Doctrine and the Iran Issue.'' The New York
Times, December 21, 1986.
``Warns of LaRouche Danger to Democracy, Human Rights.''
Teamsters News, January 1987.
``Guns Don't Kill People, Bullets Do.'' New York Post,
January 7, 1987.
``The `New Science of Politics' and the Old Art of
Government.'' The Public Interest, January/February 1987.
``Remarrying Congress and the CIA.'' The New York Times,
February 11, 1987.
``Regaining Ground.'' New Perspectives Quarterly, Winter
1987.
``How the Soviets are Bugging America.'' Popular Mechanics,
April 1987.
``Help for the Homeless Mentally Ill.'' Newsday, April 7,
1987.
``Lessons of the Iran-Contra Affair.'' Reader's Digest,
June 1987.
``How Should Contractors be Taxed?'' Datamation, June 1,
1987 (with Sen. Alfonse M. D'Amato.
``Duplicity in the Persian Gulf.'' The New York Times, June
7, 1987.
``Helping Welfare to Its Feet.'' Newsday, August 9, 1987.
``The Indigent Aren't a Caste.'' Newsday, Sept. 10, 1987.
``How Reagan Created the Crash.'' The New York Times,
November 1, 1987.
``The Tecumseh Club.'' New York, December 21, 1987.
``Our `Succession Crisis'.'' Newsweek, February 1, 1988.
``The War on Poverty Must Continue.'' The Los Angeles
Times, March 7, 1988.
``Politics and Children.'' Public Opinion, March-April
1988.
``The Modern Role of Congress in Foreign Affairs.'' Cardozo
Law Review, April 1988.
``Conspirators, Trillions, Limos in the Night.'' The New
York Times, May 23, 1988.
``Don't Turn Artists into Accountants.'' Art News, Summer
1988.
``Debunking the Myth of Decline.'' The New York Times
Magazine, June 19, 1988.
``Upstate and Downstate: There's No Great Divide.''
Newsday, September 4, 1988.
``Half the Nation's Children: Born Without Fair Chance.''
The New York Times, September 25, 1988.
``Tribute to William Hadden, Jr. M.D.'' Bulletin of the New
York Academy of Medicine, September/October 1988.
``An Opportunity for Canada.'' Financial Post, November 17,
1988.
``Common Sense Prevails.'' Sierra (Letchworth), November/
December 1988.
``Legislation for Independent-Living Programs.'' Child
Welfare, November/December 1988.
``End of the Marxist Epoch.'' The New Leader, January 23,
1989.
``Yes, We do Need a Methadone Clone.'' The New York Times,
February 26, 1989.
``Why We Called For a Surplus.'' The Washington Post, March
7, 1989.
``Welfare Reform: Serving America's Children.'' Teachers
College Record, Spring 1989.
``The End of History.'' The National Interest, Summer 1989.
``Toward a Post-Industrial Social Policy.'' The Public
Interest, Summer 1989.
``Orphanages.'' Daily News, June 13, 1989.
``The Trouble with New York.'' The Buffalo News Magazine,
September 10, 1989.
``We the People: An Atlas of the World's Ethnic Identity.''
The New York Times Book Review, October 8, 1989.
``Assassinations: Can't We Learn?'' The New York Times,
October 20, 1089.
``How to Lose: The Story of Maglev.'' Scientific American,
November 1989.
``The Coming Age of American Social Policy.'' USA Today,
November 1989.
``To My Social Security Critics.'' The New York Times,
February 9, 1990.
``The Time and Place for International Law.'' The
Washington Post, April 1, 1990.
``Surplus Value.'' The New Republic, June 4, 1990.
``Peace Dividend.'' The New York Review of Books, June 28,
1990.
``The Soviet Economy: Boy Were We Wrong.'' The Washington
Post, August 11, 1990.
``Another War--The One on Poverty--is Over, Too.'' The New
York Times, July 16, 1990.
``Families Falling Apart.'' Society, July/August 1990.
``International Law A Conceit? Look Again.'' The Wall
Street Journal, October 2, 1990.
``The Children of the State.'' The Washington Post,
November 25, 1990.
``Lets Keep Our Cool In the Gulf.'' Rochester Democrat and
Chronicle, December 7, 1990.
``How America Blew It.'' Newsweek, December 10, 1990.
``Family and Nation Revisited.'' Social thought, 1990.
``A World Regained?'' Columbia Journal of Transnational
Law, 1991.
``War?'' Jewish World. January 11-17, 1991.
``It's Almost Midnight.'' the New York Times, January 15,
1991.
``Educational Goals and Political Plans.'' The Public
Interest, Winter 1991.
``Fifty Years of Four Freedoms.'' New York Post, February
14, 1991.
``Puerto Rico Deserves the Vote.'' the San Juan Star,
February 22, 1991.
``Independence Makes Sense for an Agency as Huge as Social
Security.'' Federal Times, March 11, 1991.
``Coming to terms with Social Realities.'' Newsday/New York
Newsday, March 18, 1991.
``Do We Still Need The C.I.A.?'' The New York times. May
19, 1991.
``A Roads Scholar on Highways.'' Roll Call, May 28, 1991.
``Social Science and Learning: Educational Reform Today.''
Current, June 1991.
``Political Candor.'' Binghamton Press & Sun Bulletin, June
9, 1991.
``The Constitutional Argument for Increased Senate
salaries.'' Roll Call, June 27, 1991.
``Crack Epidemic Deserves as Much of Our Attention as
AIDS.'' The New York Times, July 2, 1991.
``What Do We have in Common.'' Time, July 9, 1991.
``Totalitarianism R.I.P.'' The Washington Post, July 22,
1991.
``A Grand Bargain: Aid for Arms Control.'' Newsweek,
September 9, 1991.
``Social Justice in the Next Century.'' America, September
14, 1991.
``The Hearings on Judge Thomas.'' The Washington Post,
September 22, 1991.
``An End to Making Welfare Policy by Anecdote.'' The New
York Times, September 26, 1991.
``Big Red Lie.'' The Washington Post, September 26, 1991.
``Dependency is Our New Problem.'' Newsday, October 18,
1991.
``Two Cheers for Solzhenitsyn.'' The New York Times Book
Review, November 24, 1991.
``How 100 Amendments Became a Simple 10.'' New York Post,
December 14, 1991.
``The Paranoid Style.'' The Washington Post, December 29,
1991.
``Should Congress Extend Fast Track Negotiating
Authority?'' Congressional digest, February 1992.
``North Dakota, Math Country.'' the New York times,
February 3, 1992.
``Wretched Exceed.'' The Washington Post, February 9, 1992.
``Traffickers in Hate and Misinformation.'' Long Island
Jewish World, March 3-9, 1992.
`` `Welfare is Back in the News': What Has Changed since
the Passage of the Family Support Act.'' Public Welfare,
Spring, 1992 (part of symposium: ``the New Paternalism'').
``Social Security.'' the Wall Street Journal, April 1992.
``Official Lies.'' Albany Times Union, May 3, 1992.
Adaptation of Blashfield Address. The Yale Review, July
1992.
``How the Great Society `Destroyed the American Family'.''
the Public Interest, Summer 1992.
``Even Liberals in DC Could Soak New York.'' Newsday, July
25, 1992.
``Supreme Court's Kidnaping Decision is Manifestly Wrong.''
Newsday, July 25, 1992.
``On Bishop O'Keefe.'' Catholic Sun, July 30, 1992.
``The Underclass: Toward a Post-Industrial Society.''
Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, September
1992 (with W.W. Rostow and Elspeth Rostow).
``A Landmark for Families.'' The New York Times, November
16, 1992.
``Defining Deviancy Down.'' The American Scholar, Winter
1992.
``A Legislative Proposal.'' EPA Journal, January/February/
March 1993.
``When the Irish Ran New York.'' City Journal, Spring 1993.
[[Page 18449]]
``The Prisoners of Charity.'' Forward, May 1993.
``Don't Blame Democracy.'' The Washington Post, June 6,
1993.
``Iatrogenic Government: Social Policy and Drug Research.''
The American Scholar, Summer 1993.
``Acid Precipitation and Scientific Fallout.'' Forum for
Applied Research and Public Policy, Summer 1993.
``Toward a New Intolerance.'' The Public Interest, Summer
1993.
``No Surrender.'' (reprint of ABNY Speech), City Journal,
Summer 1993.
``Pioneer Feminists Get a Shrine.'' The New York Times,
July 4, 1993.
``Neutralizing 19th Century Science.'' The Washington Post,
July 26, 1993.
``Guns Don't Kill People, Bullets Do.'' The New York Times,
December 12, 1993.
``Crime and Tolerance.'' Current, February 1994.
``A Project for the Millennium.'' Daily News, February 28,
1994 (not published).
``Our Stupid but Permanent CIA.'' The Washington Post, July
24, 1994.
``One Common Heart.'' Social Education, November 1994.
``The Case Against Entitlement Cuts.'' Modern Maturity,
November-December 1994.
``The Summer of '65.'' The American Enterprise, January
1995.
``Just Bite the Bullets!'' The Washington Post, January 5,
1995.
``Forget the Guns; Control the Bullets.'' Newsday, January
10, 1995.
``Time to Scrap Baseball Lords' Antitrust Exemption.''
Daily News, January 8, 1995.
``Decaying Morals Undoing Society.'' Daily News, April 16,
1995.
``Free Trade with an Unfree Society.'' The National
Interest, Summer 1995.
``Block Grants for Welfare.'' Daily News, July 9, 1995.
``The Price of Secrecy.'' The Washington Post, July 21,
1995.
``Secret Policy in the Cold War.'' The Buffalo News, July
30, 1995.
``Devolution Revolution.'' The New York Times, August 6,
1995.
``I Cannot Understand How this Can Be Happening.'' The
Washington Post, September 21, 1995.
``CPI: An Easy Fix (`The 1% Solution').'' The Washington
Post, September 26, 1995.
``It Will Shame the Congress.'' The New York Review of
Books, September 26, 1995.
``The Professionalization of Reform II.'' The Public
Interest, Fall 1995.
``An Attack on Children.'' Daily News, November 21, 1995.
``Moved by the Data, Not Doctrine.'' (on James S. Coleman)
The New York Times Magazine, December 31, 1995.
``Close Call.'' The Washington Post, January 11, 1996.
``Congress Builds a Coffin.'' The New York Review of Books,
January 11, 1996.
``Clinton Forgets Needy Children'' The Buffalo News,
January 17, 1996.
``The Culture of Secrecy.'' New York Post, March 25, 1996.
``When Principle is at Issue.'' The Washington Post, August
4, 1996 (from remarks on the welfare bill delivered on the
Senate Floor, August 1, 1996).
``From Dream to Nightmare, then Salvation.'' The Buffalo
News, August 17, 1996 (on West Valley).
``What Did Truman Know?'' New York Post, December 2, 1996.
``Social Security as We Knew It.'' The New York Times,
January 5, 1997.
``The Big Lie of 1996.'' The Washington Post, January 28,
1997.
``The MFN Muddle.'' The Washington Post, May 21, 1997 (with
Sen. William V. Roth, Jr.)
``Why I Oppose the Line Item Veto.'' Daily News, August 17,
1997.
``Not Bad For A Century's Work.'' The Washington Post,
November 23, 1997.
``Ethnicity Lives On--I'm Optimist.'' Moment, December
1997.
``Chorus of Politicians, Executives and Experts is Unable
to Agree.'' (on social Security) The New York Times, January
12, 1998.
``Putting Pizazz Back in Public Works.'' The New York Time,
March 6, 1996.
``A Confusion over Identity.'' The Wall Street Journal,
March 20, 1998.
``How to Preserve the Safety Net.'' U.S. News & World
Report, April 20, 1998.
``Don't Expand NATO.'' The Boston Globe, April 30, 1998
(from a speech delivered at the 150th Anniversary Celebration
Of The Associated Press,
allas, TX).
``Why I Oppose NATO Expansion.'' Daily News, April 30,
1998.
``Decades in the Marking, (I-86 is the Tier's Great Hope.''
Binghamton Press & Sun Bulletin, June 16, 1998.
``The Power of Upstate Politics.'' Albany Times-Union, June
21, 1998 (from a speech never delivered before NYS Democratic
Convention at Rye Brook, NY; spoke on nuclear tests in
Subcontinent).
``NATO and Nuclear War.'' Analysis of Current Events, July/
August 1998 (adapted from AP and Middlebury Speeches).
``Congress' Threat to Democracy.'' New York Post, October
22, 1998.
``Ex-Friendly Fire.'' The Weekly Standard, February 1,
1999.
major speeches
``The New Racialism.'' Commencement Address at the New
School for Social Research New York, NY, June 4, 1968.
(Published in The Atlantic Monthly, August 1968.) (Published
in Coping: On the Practice of Government.)
``The Politics of Stability.'' Speech to the National Board
Meeting of the Americans for Democratic Action, Washington,
DC, September 23, 1967.
``Politics as the Art of the Impossible.'' Commencement
Address at University of Notre Dame, South Bend, IN, June
1969. (Published in The American Scholar, Autumn 1969.)
(Published in Coping: On the Practice of Government.)
``The Whiskey Culture and the Drug Culture.'' Address at
the Governors' Conference Luncheon, U.S. Department of State,
Washington, December 3, 1969.
``A Moment Touched with Glory.'' Address before the
American Newspaper Publishers Association, New York, NY,
April 22, 1970. (On the Family Assistance Plan.)
``On Universal Higher Education,'' Speech to the 53rd
annual meeting of the American Council on Education, St.
Louis, MO, October 8, 1970.
Speech to the Third Committee of the United Nations, New
York, NY, October 7, 1971.
``An Address to the Entering Class at Harvard College.''
Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, Fall 1972. (Published in
Commentary, December 1972.)
``The World in the Year Ahead.'' Kansas State University,
Manhattan, KS, May 6, 1975.
``Pacem in Terris,'' Pacem in Terris IV Convocation,
Washington, DC, December 2, 1975.
``On Receipt of the Sculpture `Isis' at the Hirshorn Museum
and Sculpture Garden,'' Washington, DC, July 19, 1978.
``An Imperial Presidency Leads to An Imperial Congress
Leads to An Imperial Judiciary: the Iron Rule of Emulation.''
Herbert H. Lehman Memorial Lecture, March 28, 1978.
``On a Democratic Foreign Policy For a Totalitarian Age.''
U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, MD, March 22, 1979.
``Human Rights in American Foreign Policy.'' Brooklyn
College Commencement, Brooklyn, NY, June 10, 1981.
``We Confront, at This Moment, the Greatest Constitutional
Crisis since the Civil War.'' St. John's University
Commencement, Queens, NY, June 6, 1982.
``If We Can Build Saudi Arabia, Can We Not Rebuild
America?'' Robert C. Weinberg Fund Distinguished Lecturer
speech, American Planning Association, New York, NY, June 18,
1983.
``Catholic Tradition & Social Change,'' Second Annual
Seton-Neumann Lecture, U.S. Catholic Conference, Washington,
DC, May 7, 1984.
``International Law and International Order,'' Commencement
Address, Syracuse University College of Law, Syracuse, NY,
May 13, 1984. (Published in Detroit College of Law Review,
Winter 1984.)
``Only the Brave Risk Intelligence.'' Defense Intelligence
College Commencement Address, Bolling A.F.B., Washington, DC,
June 18, 1984.
``Z=R, plus 9.'' Israeli-Foreign Ministry an World Zionist
Organization, conference on Refuting Zionism/Racism equation,
Jerusalem, Israel, November 11, 1984.
``Tell the Truth About the Lie.'' Speech at ``Zionism
Equals Racism,'' State Department seminar, Washington, DC,
Decembver 10, 1984.
``Family and Nation.'' The Godkin Lectures at Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA, April 8, 1985. (Basis for Family
and Nation.)
Potemkin Palace; The Sol Feinstone Lecture on the Meaning
of Freedom; United States Military Academy, West Point, NY,
October 4, 1985.
``Constitutional Crisis . . .'' Columbia University School
of Law, New York, NY, May 12, 1987.
Address to the 78th NAACP Convention on Apartheid and
Racial Issues, New York, NY, July 7, 1987.
``Is America in Decline?'' The Samuel Lecture in Public
Policy at Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, NY, February
22, 1988.
``Pennsylvania Avenue: America's Main Street.'' National
Archives Author Lectures, Washington, DC, January 19, 1989.
``The Coming Age of American Society Policy.'' Brown
University, Providence, RI, March 13, 1989.
``Social Justice in the 21st Century.'' Fordham University,
Bronx, NY, March 29, 1991.
``The Arts in Society.'' At the Julliard School
Commencement, New York, NY, May 17, 1991.
``Address on UN Resolution 3379, ``Zionism is Racism,'' to
the Orthodox Jewish Union New York, June 5, 1991.
The Cyril Foster Lecture at Oxford University, (on
ethnicity and international relations) Oxford, England,
November 29, 1991. (Basis for Pandemonium: Ethnicity in
International Politics.)
``Stateways, Folkways and Statistics.'' Speech to the
National Research Council of the National Academy of
Sciences, Washington, DC, February 21, 1992.
``Solvency as a Condition of Economic Stability.'' Speech
to the Washington Area Economic Forum, Washington, DC, June
19, 1992.
``Defining Deviancy Down.'' Speech to the American
Sociological Association, Washington, DC, August 22, 1992.
[[Page 18450]]
``Social Policy and Drug Research.'' The Inaugural Norman
E. Zinberg Lecture, John F. Kennedy School of Government,
Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, December 5, 1992.
``The Class of ``43 (Toward a New Intolerance).'' Speech to
the Association for a Better New York (ABNY), New York, NY,
April 15, 1993. (Published in City Journal, Summer 1993.)
Dedication of the Thurgood Marshall Judiciary Building,
Washington, DC, March 11, 1999.
``Return to Legality as an International Norm.'' The Lionel
Trilling Lecture at Columbia University, New York, NY,
February 19, 1996.
Remarks at the Secretary's Open Forum (on Secrecy), U.S.
Department of State, Washington, DC, March 6, 1996.
Testimony (on Secrecy), U.S. Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence, Washington, DC, March 27, 1996.
Address at The VENONA Conference. National War College, Ft.
McNair, Washington, DC, October 4, 1996.
``Secrecy as a Form of Government Regulation.'' Georgetown
University, Washington, DC, March 3, 1997.
Remarks at the Memorial for Al Shanker. George Washington
University, Washington, DC, April 9, 1997.
The Commissioning of the U.S.C. The Sullivans. Staten
Island, NY, April 19, 1997.
Times Square Symposium on the Homeless. New York, NY, April
21, 1997.
Arts Education Technology Conference. Palisades, NY, May 3,
1997.
Dedication of the Chaim Herzog Center. Ben-Gurion
University of the Negev, Jerusalem, Israel, May 26, 1997.
``Secrecy.'' National Press Club, Washington, DC, June 13,
1997.
``Government Secrecy in the Information Age.'' Secretary's
Open Forum, U.S. Department of State, Washington, DC, July
25, 1997.
Keynote address. Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy
Conference, Buffalo, NY, September 20, 1997.
``Fifty Years of `Meet the Press.'' Al Smith Memorial
Dinner, Waldorf-Astoria, New York, NY, November 3, 1997.
Joseph Henry Award Presented to Dr. Frederic Seitz.
Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, November 7, 1997.
``100 Years of Ziolnism.'' The Capitol, Washington, DC,
November 14, 1997.
``On the Commodification of Medicine.'' The Cartwright
Lecture, Columbia University School of Medicine, New York,
NY, December 10, 1998. (Published in Academic Medicine, May
1998.)
____________________