Head Start – Where Are the Headlines Now?  

In the early 1960s, American political leaders were looking for a panacea, a quick, easy solution for the embarrassing, even dangerous, problems of poverty, hunger, malnutrition, and explosive political alienation. Head Start was the perfect cure. It was relatively noncontroversial, …



Growth of Reform Among the Teamsters  

When the New School for Social Research presented Ted Katsaros at its labor-management luncheon last December, it was recognizing, somewhat belatedly, the union reformer. Just 20 years ago, the same luncheon series featured A.J. Hayes’s, then president of the Machinists …





Class and Race in Black America  

These books address a wide array of topics relating to the changing position of blacks in America. Both acknowledge the importance of the reforms won by the civil rights movement. Both also offer carefully documented indictments of the continuing poverty …





Daniel Moynihan: A Dangerous Man?  

This is Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s account of his brief and stormy period of service as American ambassador at the United Nations in 1975-76. Moynihan had been a very quiet ambassador in Indira Gandhi’s India. Shortly after his return to the …







Remembrance of Yiddish Martyrdom  

One morning more than a quarter of a century ago, when I made the familiar turn from University Place east onto 12th Street toward “the building, “there were some 20 or 30 men near the entrance shouting, “Where are Feffer …









What Can We Make of Sociobiology?  

Wilson describes his much discussed new book as a speculative essay in defense of scientific materialism or “the new naturalism.” At the core of his view is “the evolutionary epic.” Everything in the universe, the mind included, evolved into its …