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After the birth of my second child, I was given an injection of Depo-Provera [Jan. 24]. I immediately began to bleed and to experience depression and insomnia. The side effects did not abate for a year. More research is needed before this drug is used as a contraceptive in this or any other country...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Feb. 21, 1983 | 2/21/1983 | See Source »

...through the shoals and eddies of café society, it may have been because he was, at heart, a maker of magazines. He pioneered foreign editions (the British, French and German versions of Vogue, known round the office as Brogue, Frog and Grog), introduced color photography and invented the "bleed" (borderless) page. He spent his idle hours analyzing advertising and circulation figures. Nast once confessed: "I am merely a glorified bookkeeper...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Bookkeeper | 9/20/1982 | See Source »

...early as 1963. Eventually, the dope, smack, uppers and downers, the busts and jail sentences, piled up to form a wall even the Stones could not scale. They stayed home from 1967-69, recording ever more varied and inventive albums--Between the Buttons, Beggar's Banquet. Let it Bleed, but remained largely invisible to the outside world...

Author: By Paul M. Barrett, | Title: Rockin' The U.S.A. | 6/25/1982 | See Source »

...parable about mankind. Chulkaturin, reading from his diary, tells the tale of the titular fifth horse, harnessed for some mysterious reason to a coach which already boasts a full complement of four horses. The coachman, who has shackled the fifth horse so clumsily as to make it chafe and bleed, explains that the animal has no purpose in life but to run, senselessly and painfully. Chulkaturin thinks of himself in terms of this story, for he and the fifth horse are both defined by an utterly characterless superfluity...

Author: By Deborah K. Holines, | Title: A Tale of Two Outcasts | 3/17/1982 | See Source »

Whoever was the culprit, in Garment's view, only radical surgery and the fullest admission of error could avert catastrophe. But if the President was involved even indirectly, full disclosure would not be the course selected; hence the Administration might bleed to death amid a cascade of revelations. Garment was convinced that the Administration would have to be ripped apart and reconstituted. Nixon would have to put himself at the head of this movement of reform, brutally eradicate the rot, and rally the American people for a fresh start...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WATERGATE: YEARS OF UPHEAVAL | 3/8/1982 | See Source »

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