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...your best thinking when your feet hurt. That's true even for geniuses. On a crisp fall morning back in 1952, Peter Hulit was tending to business at his shoe store on Nassau Street--the venerable main drag of Princeton, N.J.--when he got an emergency call. Helen Dukas, Albert Einstein's secretary-housekeeper, was on the line. Could Hulit come to the physicist's home? "Dr. Einstein's shoes are hurting him," Dukas said. Recalls Hulit: "I'd never made a house call before or since. But this was Einstein...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Einstein's Feet | 4/17/2005 | See Source »

...never had a pair of black shoes in his life," recalls Hulit. "But I knew he was due to appear at an event in New York City pretty soon. I wasn't going to let him go in brown shoes or sneakers. Even if he was Albert Einstein...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Einstein's Feet | 4/17/2005 | See Source »

After capturing Leipzig, the U.S. First Army drew to a halt along the Mulde River, a tributary of the Elbe, Lieut. Albert Kotzebue of the 273rd Infantry Regiment was told to take 35 men and explore the narrow strip of land between the two rivers to see if he could establish contact with the Soviets. But he was ordered not to go more than two miles to the east...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: V-E Day: There Was Such a Feeling of Joy | 4/12/2005 | See Source »

...frivolous: companies seek them for janitors or other low-level employees. In many instances, the Government's security investigations appear cursory. The Office of Personnel Management, a smaller Government security agency, investigated 138,252 cases between 1980 and 1984: only 108 were refused clearance. "That suggests," said Tennessee Senator Albert Gore, "either that virtually all applicants are of sterling character, or that we have a system which is basically ineffective...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Spying to Support a Life-Style | 4/12/2005 | See Source »

There was, take your seats please, actual convention business as well, and the hottest topic of the general sessions was international terrorism. In her keynote address at Royal Albert Hall, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher spoke angrily of a newly "fashionable heresy," that "if you feel sufficiently strongly about some particular issue, be it nuclear weapons, racial discrimination or animal liberation, you are entitled to claim superiority to the law and are therefore absolved." Thatcher argued that terrorists were increasingly active, in part, because news attention encouraged them. The P.M. told the lawyers, to repeated applause, that reporters should voluntarily refrain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Law: On the Town in London | 4/12/2005 | See Source »

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