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...middle class has moved away from the ETA, and Basques in general have wearied of the struggle, the terrorists have come to draw most of their support-and recruits-from the dismal industrial suburbs that dot the narrow Basque mountain valleys some 20 to 25 miles inland. One such is Renteria (pop. 18,000), which adjoins the old Spanish summer royal residence of San Sebastian. A river running through town has the sickly sweet stench of dumped industrial wastes. A pall of chemical smoke from paper, plastics and cement factories hangs over the area on all but the windiest days...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Spain: Terrorists from the Mountains | 8/10/1981 | See Source »

...bright summer day, when suddenly all of Beirut shook with the roar of bombers and the thunder of antiaircraft artillery. Small puffs of white smoke began to dot the sky as local militia groups fired in vain at the screaming jets. When the fury of the attack finally ended, two hours later, at least 200 people were dead and 600 injured, victims of the first Israeli air raid against the Lebanese capital since 1978. The target of the jets: specific Palestinian offices within the city...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Middle East: Escalating the Savagery | 7/27/1981 | See Source »

...Picasso and Juan Gris, or Carlo Carra's Red Horseman) is to see a very informed mind at work, particularly at obscure levels of parody. How, for instance, does one render the odd ambiguities and shifts of cubist or futurist painting in terms of this rigidly determinate dot-and-line style? Of course, it is not paintings but reproductions that Lichtenstein parodies; reproduction itself reduces art to dots, and by increasing the scale of that convention, Lichtenstein exposes it, reminding us that most of our experience of art is vicarious and based on print...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: An All-American Mannerist | 6/22/1981 | See Source »

...work of "these chemists who pile up little dots," as Gauguin contemptuously named the pointillists, was to the 1890s what constructivism would be to the 1920s: the house style of Utopian socialism in its various forms. Pissarro was a fervent anarchist, and his dot-crusted scenes of idyllic rural labor (as stylized and unreal, in some ways, as any 18th century pastoral) are attempts, not always successful, to convey an ideal vision of social dignity based on freely shared work. In this he was the heir of Millet as well-though he certainly did not know peasant life as Millet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Impressionism's Oak-Tree Uncle | 6/15/1981 | See Source »

Some banks, on the other hand, have decided to go after consumer business and de-emphasize the corporate side of finance. The most innovative of these is Citibank, which has sunk $225 million into new consumer technology. It has installed 468 automated-teller machines that now dot the streets of New York City like so many telephone booths. The new tellers can take deposits, issue cash and transfer funds from a savings account to checking. The machines already handle about 30% of the bank's consumer business at one-half the cost of transactions handled by human tellers. Says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Savings Revolution | 6/8/1981 | See Source »

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