Vol. 60 No. 1 1993 - page 33

THE END OF POLITICS?
41
perior sources of information, superior judgment - let him take the re–
sponsibility.
In a period of protracted international crisis, power flows to the
presidency. Given that situation, one way in which voters can check the
pretensions of the imperial presidency, is to give Congress to the opposi–
tion party. So I would add this as another reason why the voters, I be–
lieve, quite deliberately prefer to live with divided government. If we had
given Nixon a Congress he could control, God knows what might have
happened to the Republic.
Edith
Kurzweil: Are there any more questions from our audience? It
doesn't look as if there are. If not, we will adjourn for refreshments.
Thank you
all
very much.
- -
~
t:::\
~
rD)
~
The Challenge of Pluralism
~
,
~ ~
Education, Politics, and Values
~
1.
....
F. Clark Power
&
Daniel
K.
Lapsley, Editors
LI.
jj
UJ
The Challenge ofPluralism
examines the prob–
lematic issue of the role of moral education in a
pluralistic society. The book takes an interdiscipli–
nary focus, including well-known experts in such
fields as psychology, educational policy studies,
history of education, political history, curriculum,
philosophy of education, theology, and gender
studies.
Contributors include, among others, Walter
Nicgorski, Charles D. Blakeney, Ann Diller) and
James W. Fowler.
$32.95 cloth
At bookstores or send list price plus $3.00 postage to:
University of Notre Dame Press
P.O. Box 635, South Bend, IN 46624
I...,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32 34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,...176
Powered by FlippingBook