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...muscle to pry the Stanley Cup away from the Canadiens. With a goaltender's fine appreciation of the scorer's art, the Islanders' Glenn Resch sums up his teammates: "You couldn't draft a bigger, stronger left wing than Gillies. Trottier always slips through like Earl Campbell. Bossy can put the puck in the net on every good chance. He and Trottier have that psychic thing between them that a great line has to have. The ingredients are here. If we don't win, we've run out of excuses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Hockey's Power Players | 2/5/1979 | See Source »

While listening to his brethren's legalistic arguments at Supreme Court conferences during the '60s, the late Chief Justice Earl Warren would impatiently interject, "Yes, yes,'yes. But is it right? Is it good?" His stance remains at once noble and unsettling. Says Stanford Law Professor Gerald Gunther: "Part of the price of their remarkable independence, tenure, reverence, is that judges are under a special obligation to justify their opinions, even if they got there by their guts originally." Judges are supposed to look for the intent of lawmakers, heed precedent, and hesitate to read their...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Essay: Have the Judges Done Too Much? | 1/22/1979 | See Source »

...Earl Monroe (Three, one with the Bullets, two with the Knicks...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Sports Cube First Annual Basketball Mid-Year | 1/19/1979 | See Source »

...question all along has been: How many employees turning 65 would choose to keep working? It will not be fully answered until the law has been in effect a year or two, but the experience of companies that changed their policies earl-or never did force retirement at 65-indicates that the numbers will be small. As companies have made retirement benefits more generous, the trend for decades has been toward earlier, not later retirement. For example, at Republic Steel Corp., which has never had mandatory retirement, less than 1% of the 40,000 workers stay on past...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Lucking Out on Later Retirement | 1/15/1979 | See Source »

From its first issue, featuring a cover story on Spiro Agnew, New Times has seldom been guilty of faintheartedness. The magazine quoted the racial slur that drove former Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz into early retirement, printed an unflattering profile of est's Werner Erhard that Esquire had found too hot to handle, demolished liberal myths about the Black Panthers, grabbed the first interviews with Abbie Hoffman on the lam and Bill and Emily Harris in jail, found environmental horrors lurking in microwave ovens, drinking water and aerosol cans, and helped reopen the case of Peter Reilly, the young Connecticut...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Final Tribute | 11/27/1978 | See Source »

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