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...Communist China's lower classes who is best known in the West for his 1936 novel Rickshaw Boy. During the Cultural Revolution, Lao came under ferocious attack by the fanatical Red Guards. After a dutiful attempt to write proletarian poetry in accord with the party line of that chaotic period, Lao She told his wife he was leaving home in search of "a peaceful place." He walked to the nearby T'ai-p'ing (Great Peace) Lake in Peking, where he drowned himself at the age of 67. Subsequently, all of his novels, plays, poetry and humorous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COMMUNISM: Two Victories for the Word | 12/12/1977 | See Source »

...chaotic shipping world, which has far more tonnage than is usable, the Soviets do indeed have some vital economic advantages. They do not have to charge the 12.5% to 15% increases scheduled by the various price-fixing conferences for 1978. Wage costs for their crews are laughably low by U.S. standards-$97 a month for the master, $31 for an ordinary seaman. The vessels are fueled at costs that are fully 75% below those of other nations. Thus, under present circumstances the Soviet ships seem likely to pick up more and more cargo...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Piracy or Profit on the High Seas? | 12/5/1977 | See Source »

...anarchy of Bu@#241;uel's vision, there is nothing chaotic about his filmmaking style. At 77, he is in such fluid touch with his 'medium that he seems incapable of staging an awkward shot. The movie appears to flow directly from his subconscious, just as surrealist art is meant to do. Fernando Rey, a veteran of a decade of Buñuel films, finds as much baroque humor in his many bouts with coitus interruptus as he did in the unfinished eating scenes of The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie. The two mysterious Conchitas - one svelte (Carole...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Orderly Chaos | 12/5/1977 | See Source »

Harrah's approach to managing the chaotic business of gambling is to leave nothing to chance. High above its crowded Reno and Lake Tahoe casinos, where $2 billion changes hands each year, security guards crawl along steel catwalks and watch for cheaters through one-way ceiling mirrors. Near by, cashiers match bingo winners against a computerized list of more than 4,000 cards. Players who switch cards, load dice or pinch bets pose a constant threat to profitability. So does the danger of thievery by employees: to discourage theft, cash from the company's 3,900 gaming tables...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Taking the Risk Out of Gambling | 11/21/1977 | See Source »

Leyland's car workers voted to replace this chaotic state of affairs with a single companywide labor pact, to be negotiated by November 1979. The centralized agreement is to provide that all Leyland plants pay the same wage for comparable jobs. Negotiating the contract will not be easy: the unskilled production-line workers who belong to the Transport and General Workers Union argue that they ought to be paid as much as the skilled craftsmen represented by the Amalgamated Union of Engineering Workers, while the A.U.E.W. is determined to maintain the pay differentials. But the vote at least staved...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Last Chance for Leyland | 11/14/1977 | See Source »

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