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LEADER 00000nam 22000008a 4500
001 ocm61425195
003 OCoLC
005 20051201123838.0
008 050819s2005 nju 000 0 eng
015 GBA573336|2bnb
016 7 013283014|2Uk
020 0471771724|qhardback
035 (OCoLC)61425195
035 (Sirsi) i0471771724
040 UKM|beng|cUKM|dGTK
049 OLAY
082 04 368.4300973|222
100 1 Altman, Nancy J.,|d1950-
245 14 The battle for social security :|bfrom FDR's vision to
Bush's gamble /|cNancy J. Altman.
263 200511
264 1 Hoboken, N.J. :|bWiley ;|aChichester :|bJohn Wiley
[distributor],|c2005.
300 vi, 362 pages ;|c25 cm
336 text|btxt|2rdacontent
337 unmediated|bn|2rdamedia
338 volume|bnc|2rdacarrier
505 0 I. From the poorhouse to free parking II. Social
security's grandfather III. Essential insurance, poor
welfare IV. Bold woman, cautious men V. A teeny-weeny bit
of socialism VI. Dirty tricks VII. Ready, set, start again
VIII. Dr. win-the-war replaces old dr. new deal IX. Third
time's the charm X. All american program (minus a tiny
splinter group) XI. Visible gains, subterranean tremors
XII. The sky is falling and social security is bust XIII.
Aging carefully XIV. A leninist strategy XV. The drumbeat
finds a drummer XVI. The ideal, pain-free (for almost
everyone) way to strengthen social security XVII. From
FDR's vision to Bush's gable
650 0 Social security|zUnited States|xHistory.
856 41 |3Table of contents
856 41 |uhttp://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0517/2005020700.html
994 02|bGTK