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...detectors also came under heavy fire. John H. Gibbons, director of the Office of Technology Assessment, said of polygraphs, "The instrument cannot detect deception. It's more of a fear detector than a lie detector." Making a similar point with flair, Dr. John F. Beary, former high health official in the Defense Department, said he had a way to determine guilt that was cheaper than a lie detector and almost as reliable, since "it's right 50% of the time." He held up a coin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Making Government Clam Up | 10/31/1983 | See Source »

...other cities-including Detroit, Atlanta, Denver, Phoenix, Ariz., and Providence, R.I.-officers said it was too early to detect any effect on enlistments...

Author: By Ellen P. Goodman, WITH WIRE DISPATCHES | Title: Marine Recruiter to Meet With Protest | 10/31/1983 | See Source »

...authors of "build-down" also want a reduction in the number of Sea Launched Ballistic Missiles. However, the Poscidum and Trident submarines are America's best deterrent, and the greatest guarantee for peace in the nuclear age. They are mobile, hard to detect, and hard to destroy. The Soviet Union knows that they offer a retaliatory potential which Russia cannot ignore. Therefore, what peaceful purpose is served by putting a cap on the number of submarines with missile that the US can deploy at any given time...

Author: By Paul W. Green, | Title: Spreading the Wealth | 10/24/1983 | See Source »

Even before they went out to dinner, it was fairly obvious to first-afternooners that Playwright O'Neill has moved Greece to New England. Those who knew their Euripides were quick to detect a parallel between Mourning Becomes Electra and the classic tragedy, recalled how Agamemnon, returning from the Trojan War, was killed by his wife (Clytemnestra), how the long-lost son Orestes finally killed his mother's lover and his mother at the instigation of Elektra...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE THEATER 1931: MOURING BECOMES ELECTRA by Eugene O'Neill | 10/5/1983 | See Source »

Movies and pay cable may brandish their R-rated license, but none of the saltier four-letter words has yet passed the lips of a prime-time hero. No sitcom vixen has bared so much as a nipple. In the new shows one can detect a struggling within the mass-media straitjacket of language and sex. Prime time is like a twelve-year-old tentatively imitating his big bad brother: sneaking a cigarette, practicing a curse word, miming an open-mouthed kiss. Sex can only be suggested, of course, but it may also be suggestive; one smoldering glance can steam...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Video: And Mister Ed Begat Mr. Smith | 9/26/1983 | See Source »

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