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Unlike her husband, Dottie Blackmun proudly claims to be a "strict constructionist"-in the clothes designing she does as a creative hobby. She and a friend operate a custom dressmaking shop called "The Designing Women," in which they turn out fashionable clothes and teach the art to others. Mrs. Blackmun is excited about the probable move to Washington. "I'm going to have lots of fun because everywhere we go in Washington, I'll have to create a new outfit," she says. None of those who know Judge Blackmun have any fear that the Senate will keep Dottie...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Judge Harry Blackmun: A Craftsman for the Court | 4/27/1970 | See Source »

...women and sets up village conciliation boards for mending broken marriages. Such red tape will deprive the Moslem male of his traditional right to shed a wife simply by declaring "I divorce thee" three times. The plan would not abolish the ancient custom of bride price, which often amounts to ten or 20 prime cows. But it would ease the young man's burden by permitting him to pay his in-laws on the installment plan after the wedding...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tanzania: The Ties that Bind | 4/20/1970 | See Source »

Lately, he has also crossed the most sacred boundary of all: the one that separates the German literary artist from politics. By custom, Germans expect a soulful aloofness from intellectuals. Art is enduring, a thing apart, not to be contaminated by the daily, dirty round of politics. Naturally, the last thing that Germans expect of a writer is that he will paint a rooster crowing "Es-Pe-De" (for Social Democratic Party) on the side of a secondhand Volkswagen bus and vulgarly, vulgarly bounce thousands of miles through West Germany campaigning for Willy Brandt. Last summer Grass did just that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Dentist's Chair as an Allegory in Life | 4/13/1970 | See Source »

...some minimal demands on themselves." The President senses, Nixon's aides explain, that black demands, black protests, the riots of recent years, have strained white America's capacity to accept racial change. There must be time, he feels, for acceptance of the vast upheavals in law and custom that have taken place. Clearly, there is some reason in this argument-which also happens to be politically productive for Nixon. But it is not an argument on which to base moral leadership. Nixon has a tremendous opportunity for such leadership; as a Republican President, he can do things...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Black America 1970 | 4/6/1970 | See Source »

...professional artist in America, the chain of denial traditionally began with rejection by art schools, extended to the awarding of fellowships, and was completed by the indifference of prominent U.S. museums. Most institutions, forbidden by law or custom to keep race records, cannot offer firm figures, but here are their best estimates of the present situation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Situation Report: Art | 4/6/1970 | See Source »

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