Gray Panthers
GRAY PANTHERS
Founded in 1970, the Gray Panthers is a national organization dedicated to social justice for old and young people alike. However, the Gray Panthers is best known for work on behalf of older persons. It has lobbied and litigated against age discrimination in the areas of retirement, housing, and health care. The group's broad liberal agenda reflects the politics of its founder, Margaret E. "Maggie" Kuhn (1905–1995), who built the fledgling organization into a powerful force in local and national politics. Kuhn's success as an organizer, leader, spokeswoman, and author left the Gray Panthers, at the time of her death in 1995, with 70,000 members in 85 chapters nationwide. Although the organization is strongest at the grassroots level, its relatively small seven-member national staff has effected significant changes in federal law.
The protest era of the vietnam war gave rise to the Gray Panthers. In 1970 the 65-year-old Kuhn was forced by the federal mandatory retirement law to end her 22-year career in the United Presbyterian Church. However, she did not want to retire. In response Kuhn helped form a loose-knit organization called Consultation of Older and Younger Adults for Social Change. Its primary goals were changing the mandatory retirement age and uniting people of all ages to seek an end to the Vietnam War. As the group gained recognition, the press coined the term "gray panthers," comparing it to the radical black activist group, the black panthers. Kuhn adopted the name in 1972.
The Gray Panthers developed a broad political agenda. Among its goals were affordable housing, the creation of a national health system, nursing home reform, and consumer protection.
lobbying efforts soon established the group's reputation on Capitol Hill. In 1978 it helped secure passage of an amendment to the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, which raised the mandated retirement age from 65 to 70. In 1981, the Gray Panthers added a representative to the United Nations' Economic and Social Council.
Throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, the Gray Panthers backed efforts ranging from the passage of gay civil rights legislation to the legalization of the medical use of marijuana by those who are ill. They also lobbied strongly during President bill clinton's first term for the creation of a national health care system.
The organization was also active in the courts. It joined numerous cases by filing friend-of-the-court briefs and brought its own suits. Perhaps its most significant victory came in 1980, in Gray Panthers v. Schweiker, 652 F.2d 146 (D.C. Cir. 1980), a class action suit brought to change medicare regulations. At issue was how the government informed older patients when Medicare reimbursements were denied: under federal law, benefits of less than $100 could be denied for reimbursement with only a form letter, which was thick with jargon (42 U.S.C.A. § 1395 et seq.). In 1979, the Gray Panthers contended that this notification scheme was an unconstitutional violation of their due process rights. The defendant, the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, maintained that it had a congressional mandate to set restraints on the program; any further form of notification would be too expensive, it argued. After losing the initial court case, the Gray Panthers successfully argued on appeal for improved written communication and an oral hearing at which they could explain their side of the dispute.
In the late 1990s, the Gray Panthers launched a national campaign that targeted jobs and workers' rights and universal health care. In 2001 the organization launched "Stop Patient Abuse Now" (SPAN) a coalition of more than 125 national, state, and local organizations representing
seniors, patients, and others. The purpose of SPAN is to make prescription drugs affordable to all consumers. The organization continues to advocate for more environmental and safety regulations and for the reduction of military costs. The Gray Panthers has also been in the forefront of those organizations urging corporate reform after the scandals involving corporate fraud by such companies as Enron and WorldCom.
The Gray Panthers continues to hold monthly meetings in state chapters and to publish its bimonthly newsletter, Network.
further readings
Gray Panthers. Available online at <www.graypanthers.org>(accessed July 26, 2003).
Kuhn, Maggie. 1991. No Stone Unturned: The Life and Times of Maggie Kuhn. New York: Ballantine.
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Verwandlung und ubersetzung: metamorphosis, translation and the poetry of Nelly Sachs.(Critical Essay)
Magazine article from: Journal of Evolutionary Psychology; 8/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...exists. This is true for Nelly Sachs. A German who shared...On December 10, 1891, Nelly Sachs was born to William Sachs...and Margaret Karger Sachs in the prestigious Tiergarten...Berlin. An only child, Nelly was tutored at home...
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Nelly Sachs: Neglected Nobelist
Newspaper article from: Jerusalem Post; 5/12/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...he shared it with German-born Nelly Sachs - "poet of the Holocaust," as...that only after starting to read Nelly Sachs was she freed from the hellish...in postwar Germany were open to Nelly Sachs and Paul Celan, two exiles who...
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Magazine article from: The Modern Language Review; 4/1/2001; ; 700+ words
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Magazine article from: German Quarterly; 1/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; German Jewish poet Nelly Sachs (1891-1970) observed in 1948...identity attains primary urgency, Sachs's practice of obscuring individual...after the war was not exclusive to Nelly Sachs. In 1947, poetry critic Rudolf Hrtung...
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Nelly Sachs (1891-1970) is o ...
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 8/15/2004; ; 700+ words
; Nelly Sachs (1891-1970) is one of the great poets...1959). The sense of renewal is key to Sachs's enigmatic and grief-stricken poetry...by Ruth and Matthew Mead. All appear in Nelly Sachs, "O the Chimneys." Farrar Straus Giroux...
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Im Zeichen der Shoah: Aspekte der Dichtungs- und Sprachkrise bei Rose Auslander und Nelly Sachs.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: The Modern Language Review; 4/1/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...Sprachkrise bei Rose Auslander und Nelly Sachs. By ANNETTE JAEL LEHMANN. (Stauffenburg...establish autonomous poetic spaces. Sachs tries to overcome the tensions of...Poetik zwischen Mystik und Spiel. Nelly Sachs: Wortmystik und Sprachzweifel...
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Ethics and Remembrance in the Poetry of Nelly Sachs and Rose Auslander.(Review)
Magazine article from: Journal of European Studies; 3/1/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...and Remembrance in the Poetry of Nelly Sachs and Rose Auslander. By Kathrin M...developed in their wake. Since both Sachs and Auslander were marked for death...victim, survivor and witness in Sachs and Auslander, and thus usefully...
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Ethics and Remembrance in the Poetry of Nelly Sachs and Rose Auslander.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: The Modern Language Review; 10/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...and Remembrance in the Poetry of Nelly Sachs and Rose Auslander. By KATHRIN M...argument is cogently set out. But Sachs and Auslander no more 'appropriate...made of critical attacks on one of Sachs's weaker poems, but this is not...
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Paul Celan/Nelly Sachs: Correspondence.
Magazine article from: Judaism: A Quarterly Journal of Jewish Life and Thought; 3/22/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...way to prove the third point and helps us through our difficulties with the poems. And Celan's correspondence with Nelly Sachs gives us some important firsthand clues to the troubled psyche of the perennial exile who ended his own life at the...
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'You Are in the World, Paul Celan, the Pure Man!' Collecting the
Newspaper article from: Forward; 11/24/1995; ; 695 words
; ...Collecting the. Longtime Correspondence of Poets Nelly Sachs and Paul Celan Paul Celan/Nelly Sachs: Correspondence Sheep Meadow Press 112 pages...Paul Celan first encountered the writing of Nelly Sachs in 1953, when he read her lines "We stones...
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Nelly Sachs
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Nelly Sachs The German-born poet and playwright Nelly Sachs (1891-1970), winner of the Nobel...1891, into a wealthy Jewish family, Nelly Sachs grew up in Berlin. After having studied...
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Sachs, Nelly
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
Sachs, Nelly (1891–1970) German-Jewish poet and dramatist. She escaped from Nazi Germany in 1940, and her works, such as...
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Poets Laureate and Prizes
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
...x107; 1962 John Steinbeck 1963 George Seferis 1964 Jean-Paul Sartre 1965 Mikhail Sholokhov 1966 S. Y. Agnon/ Nelly Sachs 1967 Miguel Ángel Asturias 1968 Yasunari Kawabata 1969 Samuel Beckett 1970 Alexander Solzhenitsyn 1971 Pablo...
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Liebermann, Lowell
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music
...Amer. Acad. and Inst. of Arts and Letters, 1990. Comps. incl. sym.; 2 pf. concs.; Six Songs on Poems by Nelly Sachs , sop., orch.; Missa brevis ; vn. sonata; fl. sonata; quintet for pf., cl., str. trio; pf. quintet...
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Gordimer, Nadine
Book article from: Contemporary Novelists
...Wealth award, 1981; Modern Language Association award (U.S.A.), 1981; Malaparte prize (Italy), 1985; Nelly Sachs prize (Germany), 1985; Bennett award (U.S.A.), 1986; Royal Society of Literature Benson medal, 1990...
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