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Hope Co-Sponsors Talk on Welfare Reform
Posted September 23, 2002
HOLLAND -- Hope College is part of a coalition of
area colleges sponsoring the lecture "Working Wages?" by
Barbara Ehrenreich on Wednesday, Oct. 2, at 7 p.m. at Calvin
College in Grand Rapids.
The address is being presented through the Nokomis
Lecture Series sponsored by the West Michigan Women's
Studies Council, and will be presented in the Fine Arts
Center auditorium at Calvin.
The public is invited. Admission is free.
Motivated by the debates on welfare reform,
Ehrenreich left her life as a writer to spend a year working
a variety of low-income jobs, to see how people could
survive on wages of six or seven dollars per hour. She
wrote about the experiences in the book "Nickel and Dimed:
On (Not) Getting By in America," which became a "New York
Times" best-seller.
She has noted, "I tried to support myself on the
wages I could earn as an entry-level worker. I waited
tables, I cleaned the toilets of the rich, I fed Alzheimer's
patients in a nursing home, I sorted stock at Wal-Mart. All
these were difficult, exhausting jobs and it made me
understand what a serious mistake our nation made with
welfare reform."
She found the experience enlightening: the
average woman coming off welfare earns about $7 an hour,
about $280 a week before taxes. "You can't support children
on that, or even one person," she says.
Ehrenreich is the author of several other books,
including "The Worst Years of Our Lives: Irreverent Notes
from an Age of Greed," "Fear of Falling: The Inner Life of
the Middle Class," "Blood Rites: Origins and History of the
Passions of War" and the novel "Kipper's Game." She has
contributed to publications including "Time," "Harper's
Magazine," "The New Republic," "The Nation" and "The New
York Times Magazine." She has appeared on television
programs including "Good Morning America," "Today" and
"Charlie Rose."
She is a Guggenheim Fellow. She holds a doctorate
in biology, and began her writing career writing articles
for professional scientific journals.
The West Michigan Women's Studies Council was
formed in late 2001 to inform women of gender issues and
collaborate with other programs to enhance the lives of
women in West Michigan. The council consists of
representatives from six local colleges and universities,
including Aquinas College, Calvin College, Davenport
College, Grand Rapids Community College, Grand Valley State
University and Hope. The council sponsored talks by
Margaret Cho and Lani Guinier during the 2001-02 school
year.
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