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Others worry less that private funds will cramp styles. "Art has always had little to do with the economic currents of society; perhaps the cuts will provide an anxiety stimulus," Irving Karp, owner of the OK Harris gallery, in New York's SoHo, says. "I don't believe that there will be change in the genre of the works produced in the theater," Bob Moss, producer of March of the Falsettos, and current executive director of Playwrights Horizons, adds. "We have always produced what we believe in, what we know how to produce, rather than what we thought might make...

Author: By Laura K. Jereski, | Title: They Shoot Actors, Don't They? | 7/10/1981 | See Source »

...Angeles, little official attention is paid to Research Assistance, a firm openly offering 3,000 papers for sale. Illinois has an antiplagiarism statute on the books, but so far it has not caused much ghostwriters' cramp. Term-paper mills claim they are opposed to plagiarism. They are, they say, merely providing "research material." Just last week an organization calling itself Authors Research Services Inc. placed an ad in the IIlini at the University of Illinois' Chicago Circle campus. It proclaimed: "Research papers-thousands on file available for inspection in our office. Read first, then...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Straight A's at $3.50 a Page | 1/26/1981 | See Source »

...Nation editors, writers and reporter-researchers at the convention, and for the magazine's 13 correspondents and ten photographers present, the event became a pageant of sleepless nights and hectic days, hot rumors and cold coffee, convention-floor traffic jams, tired feet and writer's cramp. TIME was blessed with a spacious workroom only a few steps from the floor of Detroit's Joe Louis Arena ("The best convention setup I've seen," said Midwest Bureau Chief Benjamin Cate). Picture Editor Arnold Drapkin and his staff directed photographers to the scene of the moment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Jul. 28, 1980 | 7/28/1980 | See Source »

...artiste," Robert Fripp. With Fripp as producer, Hall found someone who understood what Hall was trying to do. Fripp gives Hall all the space Hall needs, and he rarely tries to force his own musical style on Hall. The only discernible Fripp trademarks, some thickly textured synthesizer backgrounds, never cramp Hall's vitality. Fripp calls his electronic touches "Frippertronics," but the sounds they produce differ very little from other widely used synthesizers that simulate orchestral timbers. Fripp proudly displays his toy on his solo in "Urban Landscape," but the moment seems as impressive as watching smog roll...

Author: By David C. Edelman, | Title: Declaration of Independence | 5/21/1980 | See Source »

...psyche yourself up to be mean, while for a marathon you have to be in the right frame of mind to stand pain, not give it out." This proved to be an unfortunate prophesy, since the inexperienced runner drank too much water during the race, causing his stomach to cramp. McLeod was ahead of his desired pace at 13 miles, he said, but "by 17 miles my stomach was hurting so much I just wanted to stop and get a ride back...

Author: By Nell Scovell, | Title: Miles and Trials of Crimson Marathoners | 4/23/1980 | See Source »

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