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...headed home for the final stretch of the 1982 campaign, candidates can still be found buzzing back to Capitol Hill. They know that Washington is where the money is these days, or at least where one dips into the honeypot of contributions from political action committees (PACs). In a circular chase that is dominating congressional politics as never before, the candidates are courting the PACs, and the PAC-men are courting the candidates. "Harry Truman said that some people like government so much that they want to buy it," says Democratic Congressman David Obey of Wisconsin. "The 1982 elections will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Running with the PACs | 10/25/1982 | See Source »

Harvard's troubles are only the latest battle in a war between universities and the Government over the question of cost accountability. Faculty senates of more than 20 universities passed resolutions opposing Circular A21, a directive from the Office of Management and Budget that demands "effort reporting," the documentation of how teachers spend their time while receiving federal funds. Many researchers argue that they cannot assign precise percentages to the time they spend in the classroom, lab or office. Last March, Yale declined a $30,000 federal grant because its proposed recipient, Mathematics Professor Serge Lang, would not prepare...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Where Has All the Money Gone? | 10/25/1982 | See Source »

Marian was standing with her back to the front door, stating at her television. For a long time now, Marian had felt as if she were connected to the apartment by a circular ton beam that ran through all the electrical machines she owned. She saw it as tunneling from the television through her midsection to the stereo and then around through all the electrical appliances in the room. When she went through the front door, she felt she had to pull out of the connection. She visualized the beam tearing, ripping out of the TV and stereo and dangling...

Author: By Sarah Paul, | Title: Chic Lit | 10/22/1982 | See Source »

...himself. If the prisons in which he has spent nearly half his life have provided various punishments, they have also given him a context for looking into his own mind. Since what frightens him about his mind was nurtured in prison, the process of self-examination is as circular and enclosed as Sy's upstate odyssey. Such nonprogress may be typical of a great many prisoners, but as one discovers in a place like Attica, no inmate is typical. All the instruments of uniformity in a prison-the architecture, the outfits, the language and routine-merely emphasize the fact...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Portrait of a Prisoner | 9/13/1982 | See Source »

...drive the mincing preciosity of late mannerism out of art-such were the aims of French Caravaggisti like Valentin de Boulogne (1591-1632), whose Fortune Teller raises narrative to a pitch of ironic theater worthy of Caravaggio himself. It is a raffish image of tavern survival: the old circular comedy, as the gypsy woman bilks a credulous soldier while a man steals her chicken and a little girl lifts the thief's purse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: A Feast from Le Grand Siecle: 17th Century France at the Met | 6/28/1982 | See Source »

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