Difference between revisions of "Bill Bennett"
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'''Bill Bennett''' is a lifelong Catholic famous for his conservative writings. He served as Ronald Reagan's [[Secretary of Education]]. | '''Bill Bennett''' is a lifelong Catholic famous for his conservative writings. He served as Ronald Reagan's [[Secretary of Education]]. | ||
− | His best-known work is ''A Book of Virtues'', an anthology of morally uplifting stories drawn from the Judeo-Christian West's literary history. | + | His best-known work is ''A Book of Virtues'', an anthology of morally uplifting stories drawn from the Judeo-Christian West's literary history. He has been the subject of criticism both for his prior gambling habit and for a remark he made on his radio show in which he suggested that the crime rate would go down if every black baby were aborted.<ref>http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/01/politics/01bennett.html?ex=1188273600&en=378d09a4a47ecd82&ei=5070</ref> |
[[Category:Biography]] | [[Category:Biography]] | ||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bennet, Bill}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Bennet, Bill}} | ||
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+ | ===References=== | ||
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+ | <references/> |
Revision as of 22:30, 26 August 2007
Bill Bennett is a lifelong Catholic famous for his conservative writings. He served as Ronald Reagan's Secretary of Education.
His best-known work is A Book of Virtues, an anthology of morally uplifting stories drawn from the Judeo-Christian West's literary history. He has been the subject of criticism both for his prior gambling habit and for a remark he made on his radio show in which he suggested that the crime rate would go down if every black baby were aborted.[1]