Irwin F. Fredman

Irwin F. Fredman's picture

Irwin F. Fredman has been an instructor in the humanities at Hobart College in upstate New York as well as an advertising man on Madison Avenue. Now semiretired, he is writing a study of American democracy, “in the spirit of Tocqueville,” tentatively titled How America Lost Its Balance . In it, he uses Great Neck, Long Island, where he lived for many years, as a microcosm of the way economic power and special interests can corrupt the political process. It was while he was studying the machinations of Harry Sinclair of Teapot Dome fame (Sinclair lived in Great Neck) that Fredman first came upon the parallels that he explores in this essay.

Articles by this Contributor

September/October 1987

An old, familiar show is back in Washington. There’s a new cast, of course, but the script is pretty much the same as ever. Here’s the program.