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...impossible not to feel the change in atmosphere. Intrigue, speculation and confusion abound. For more than an hour last week, the national soccer team refused to leave its field so the ragtag People's Army could parade before foreign television cameras. In private, high-ranking government officials acknowledge that there is widespread dismay and despair among Iraqis over the consequences of the nation's invasion of Kuwait. Influential citizens claim knowledge that the attack was opposed by 18 colonels and generals, as well as by several senior ministers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Gulf: Dance While You Can | 10/15/1990 | See Source »

Signs of Saddam's contradictory legacy abound: housing projects only half- finished, soccer stadiums and no foreign teams to play in them, empty hotels with antiaircraft batteries on their roofs. The city is at once sinuous and Stalinesque: palm trees and concrete mausoleums with a martial theme. And everywhere the gaze of the maximum leader. Hundreds of billboard-size portraits are painted on buildings, framed in traffic circles, displayed in lobbies: Saddam drawing sword, Saddam on stallion, Saddam in sunglasses, Saddam in camouflage fatigues, Saddam looking like Xavier Cugat in white suit, Saddam slaying the infidels. In the city center...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Gulf: In The Capital of Dread | 10/8/1990 | See Source »

...aggression is most salient. Despite assurances in the reunification treaty that Germany will slash its fighting force to 345,000 soldiers and renounce chemical, biological and nuclear weapons, the memory of three horrible conflagrations in the past 120 years dies hard. Notions of an aggressive and authoritarian "German character" abound...

Author: By John L. Larew, | Title: Who's Afraid of United Germany? | 10/3/1990 | See Source »

Unfortunately, moments of annoyance abound in Rameau's Nephew, and most of them arise because of the American Repertory Theatre's obsessive need to demonstrate its technical prowess. But such moments cannot detract from the skillfull direction, inspired acting, and sharp dialogue which characterize Rameau's Nephew. It's an engaging bit of satire, one which decisively proves the wisdom of Bob Dylan's old adage that "Money doesn't talk, it swears...

Author: By Adam E. Pachter, | Title: Rameau's Nephew: Brilliant Invective | 9/28/1990 | See Source »

...Harvard, the garden of earthly delights. For many students, Harvard is no great shakes socially. Derisive comparisons with other colleges and even with high school abound. But in one respect, Harvard social life differs little from that of any other college; it is more socially acceptable to abuse alcohol--even to the point of alcoholism--than it is to smoke...

Author: By Liam T.A. Ford, | Title: Harvard's Favorite Drug Habit | 9/27/1990 | See Source »

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